IAD
BY CAPTAIN CHARLES KING, U.S.A.
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Felline; him like an ox.'
Page 107.
A TROOPER GALAHAD
BY
CAPTAIN CHARLES KING, U.S.A.
AUTHOR OF
" THE COLONEL'S DAUGHTER," " MARION'S FAITH," "CAPTAIN BLAKE,'
"UNDER FIRE," "FROM SCHOOL TO BATTLE-FIELD," ETC.
PHILADELPHIA
J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
1899
COPYRIGHT, 1898,
BY
J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.
ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY. PHILADELPHIA, U.S. A.
A TROOPER GALAHAD
***
CHAPTER I.
"LIFE is full of ups and downs," mused the
colonel, as he laid on the littered desk before him
an official communication just received from De
partment Head-Quarters, " especially army life,—
and more especially army life in Texas."
"Now, what are you philosophizing about?"
asked his second in command, a burly major,
glancing over the top of the latest home paper,
three weeks old that day.
"D'ye remember Pigott, that little cad that
was court-martialled at San Antonio in '68 for
quintuplicating his pay accounts? He married
the widow of old Alamo Hendrix that winter.
He's worth half a million to-day, is running for
Congress, and will probably be on the military
committee next year, while here's Lawrence, who
was judge advocate of the court that tried him,
gone all to smash." And the veteran officer com
manding the — th Infantry and the big post at
Fort Worth glanced warily along into the adjoin-
3
M12539
4; ,«, ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
ing office, where a clerk was assorting the papers
i on the adjutant's desk.
"It's the saddest case I ever heard of," said
Major Brooks, tossing aside the Toledo Blade and
tripping up over his own, which he had thought
fully propped between his legs as he took his seat
and thoughtlessly ignored as he left it. "Damn
that sabre, — and the service generally!" he
growled, as he recovered his balance and tramped
to the window. " I'd almost be willing to quit it
as Pigott did if I could see my way to a moderate
competence anywhere out of it. Lawrence was
as good a soldier as we had in the 12th, and, yet,
what can you do or say? The mischief's done."
And, beating the devil's tattoo on the window,
the major stood gloomily gazing out over the
parade.
"It isn't Lawrence himself I'm so Or
derly, shut that door!" cried the chief, whirling
around in his chair, " and tell those clerks I want
it kept shut until the adjutant comes; and you
stay out on the porch. — It isn't Lawrence I'm so
sorely troubled about, Brooks. He has ability,
and could pick up and do well eventually, but
he's utterly discouraged and swamped. What's
to become, though, of that poor child Ada and his
little boy?"
"God knows," said Brooks, sadly. "I've got
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 5
five of my own to look after, and you've got four.
No use talking of adopting them, even if Law
rence would listen; and he never would listen
to anything or anybody — they tell me," he added,
after a minute's reflection. " I don't know it my
self. It's what Buxton and Canker and some of
those fellows told me on the ^Republican last sum
mer. I hadn't seen him since Gettysburg until
we met here."
"Buxton and Canker be — exterminated!" said
the colonel, hotly. "I never met Buxton, and
never want to. As for Canker, by gad, there's
another absurdity. They put him in the cavalry
because consolidation left no room for him with
us. What do you suppose they'll do with him in
the — th?"
" The Lord knows, as I said before. He never
rode anything but a hobby in his life. I don't
wonder Lawrence couldn't tolerate preaching
from him. But what I don't understand is, who
made the allegation. What's his offence? Every
one knows that he's in debt and trouble, and that
he's had hard lines and nothing else ever since the
war, but the court acquitted him of all blame in
that money business '
"And now to make room for fellows with
friends at court," burst in the colonel, wrathfully,
"he and other poor devils with nothing but a
Q A TROOPER GALAHAD.
fighting record and a family to provide for are
turned loose on a year's pay, which they're to
have after things straighten out as to their ac
counts with the government. Now just look at
Lawrence! Ordnance and quartermaster's stores
hopelessly boggled "
"Hush!" interrupted Brooks, starting back
from the window. " Here he is now."
Assembly of the guard details had sounded a
few moments before, and all over the sunshiny
parade on its westward side, in front of the
various barracks, little squads of soldiers armed
and in full uniform were standing awaiting the
next signal, while the porches of the low wooden
buildings beyond were dotted with groups of
comrades, lazily looking on. Out on the green
sward, broad and level, crisscrossed with gravel
walks, the band had taken its station, marshalled
by the tall drum-major in his huge bear-skin
shako. From the lofty flag-staff in the centre of
the parade the national colors were fluttering in
the mountain breeze that stole down from the
snowy peaks hemming the view to the northwest
and stirred the leaves of the cottonwoods and the
drooping branches of the willows in the bed of
the rushing stream sweeping by the southern
limits of the garrison. Within the enclosure,
sacred to military use, it was all the same old
A TROOPER GALAHAD. f
familiar picture, the stereotyped fashion of the
frontier fort of the earliest '70s, — dull-hued bar
racks on one side or on two, dull-hued, broad-
porched cottages — the officers' quarters — on
another, dull-hued offices, storehouses, corral
walls, scattered about the outskirts, a dull-hued,
sombre earth on every side; sombre sweeping
prairie beyond, spanned by pallid sky or snow-
tipped mountains; a twisting, winding road or
two, entering the post on one front, issuing at
the other, and tapering off in sinuous curves
until lost in the distance; a few scattered ranches
in the stream valley; a collection of sheds,
shanties, and hovels surrounding a bustling es
tablishment known as the store, down by the
ford, — the centre of civilization, apparently, for
thither trended every roadway, path, track, or
trail visible to the naked eye. Here in front of
the office a solitary cavalry horse was tethered.
Yonder at the sutler's, early as it was in the day,
a dozen quadrupeds, mules, mustangs, or Indian
ponies, were blinking in the sunshine. Dogs in
numerable sprawled in the sand. Bipeds lolled
lazily about or squatted on the steps on the edge
of the wooden porch, some in broad sombreros,
some in scalp-lock and blanket, — none in the garb
of civil life as seen in the nearest cities, and the
nearest was four or five hundred miles away.
8 4- TROOPER GALAHAD.
Out on the parade were bits of lively color, the
dresses of frolicsome children to the east, the
stripes and facings of the cavalry and artillery at
the west; for, by some odd freak of the fortunes
of war, here, away out at Fort Worth, had come
a crack light battery of the old army, which, with
Brooks's battalion of the cavalry, and head-quar
ters' staff, band, and six companies of the — th In
fantry, made up the garrison,— the biggest then
maintained in the Department immortalized by
Sheridan as only second choice to Sheol. It was
the winter of '70 and '71, as black and dreary a
time as ever the army knew, for Congress had
telescoped forty-five regiments into half the num
ber and blasted all hopes of promotion, — about
the only thing the soldier has to live for.
And that wasn't the blackest thing about the
business, by any means. The war had developed
the fact that we had thousands of battalion com
manders for whom the nation had no place in
peace times, and scores of them, in the hope and
promise of a life employment in an honorable
profession, accepted the tender of lieutenancies
in the regular army in '66, the war having broken
up all their vocations at home, and now, having
given four years more to the military service, —
taken all those years out of their lives that might
have been given to establishing themselves in
A TROOPER GALAHAD. Q
business,— they were bidden to choose between
voluntarily quitting the army with a bonus of a
year's pay, and remaining with no hope of ad
vancement. Most of them, despairing of finding
employment in civil life, concluded to stay: so
other methods of getting rid of them were de
vised, and, to the amaze of the army and the dis
may of the victims, a big list was published of
officers "rendered supernumerary" and sum
marily discharged. And this was how it hap
pened that a gallant, brilliant, and glad-hearted
fellow, the favorite staff officer of a glorious corps
commander who fell at the head of his men after
three years of equally glorious service, found him
self in far-away Texas this blackest of black
Fridays, suddenly turned loose on the world and
without hope or home.
Cruel was no word for it. Entering the army
before the war, one of the few gifted civilians
commissioned because they loved the service and
then had friends to back them, Edgar Lawrence
had joined the cavalry in Texas, where the first
thing he did was to fall heels over head in love
with his captain's daughter, and a runaway match
resulted. Poor Kitty Tyrrell! Poor Ned Law
rence! Two more unpractical people never lived.
She was an army girl with aspirations, much
sweetness, and little sense. He was a whole-
10 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
souled, generous, lavish fellow. Both were ex
travagant, she particularly so. They were sorely
in debt when the war broke out, and he, instead
of going in for the volunteers, was induced to be
come aide-de-camp to his old colonel, who passed
him on to another when he retired; and when the
war was half over Lawrence was only a captain
of staff, and captain he came out at the close.
Brevets of course he had, but what are brevets
but empty title? What profiteth it a man to be
called colonel if he have only the pay of a sub?
Hundreds of men who eagerly sought his aid or
influence during the war " held over him" at the
end of it. Another general took him on his staff
as aide-de-camp, where Lawrence was invaluable.
Kitty dearly loved city life, parties, balls, operas,
and theatres; but Lawrence grew lined and gray
with care and worry. The general went the way
of all flesh, and Lawrence to Texas, unable to get
another staff billet. They set him at court-mar
tial duty at San Antonio for several months, for
Texas furnished culprits by the score in the days
that followed the war, and many an unpromising
army career was cut short by the tribunal of
which Captain and Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel
Lawrence was judge advocate; but all the time
he had a skeleton in his own closet that by and
by rattled its way out. Time was in the war days
A TROOPER GALAHAD. H
when many of the men of the head-quarters
escort banked their money with the beloved and
popular aide. He had nearly twelve hundred
dollars when the long columns probed the Wil
derness in '64. It was still with him when he
was suddenly sent back to Washington with the
body of his beloved chief, but every cent was
gone before he got there, stolen from him on the
steamer from Acquia Creek, and never a trace
was found of it thereafter. For years he was
paying that off, making it good in driblets, but
while he was serving faithfully in Texas, com
manding a scout that took him miles and miles
away over the Llano Estacado, there were inimi
cal souls who worked the story of his indebtedness
to enlisted men for all it was worth, and, aided by
the complaints of some of their number, to his
grievous disadvantage. He came home from a
brilliant dash after the Kiowas to find himself
complimented in orders and confronted by
charges in one and the same breath. The court
acquitted him of the charges and "cut" his ac
cusers, but the shame and humiliation of it all
seemed to prey upon his spirits; and then Kitty
Tyrrell died.
" If that had only happened years before," said
the colonel, "it would have been far better for
Lawrence, for she conscientiously believed her-
12 ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
self the best wife in the world, and spent every
cent of his income in dressing up to her concep
tion of the character." Once the most dashing
and debonair of captains, poor Ned ran down at
the heel and seemed unable to rally. New com
manders came to the department, to his regiment,
and new officials to the War Office, — men "who
knew not Joseph;" and when the drag-net was cast
into the whirlpool of army names and army repu
tations, it was set for scandal, not for services,
and the old story of those unpaid hundreds was
enmeshed and served up seasoned with the latest
spice obtainable from the dealers rebuked of that
original court. And, lo ! when the list of victims
reached Fort Worth in the reorganization days,
old Frazier, the colonel, burst into a string of
anathemas, and more than one good woman into
a passion of tears, for poor Ned Lawrence, at that
moment long days' marches away towards the Kio
Bravo, was declared supernumerary and mustered
out of the service of the United States with one
year's pay, — pay which he could not hope to get
until every government account was satisfactorily
straightened, and this, too, at a time when the
desertion of one sergeant and the death of an
other revealed the fact that his storehouses liad
been systematically robbed and that he was hope
lessly short in many a costly item charged against
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 13
him. That heartless order was a month old when
the stricken soldier reached his post, and then and
there for the first time learned his fate.
Yes, they had tried to break it to him. Letters
full of sympathy were written and sent by couriers
far to the north; others took them on the Concho
trail. Brooks and Frazier both wrote to San An
tonio messages thence to be wired to Washington
imploring reconsideration; but the deed was done.
Astute advisers of the War Secretary clinched
the matter by the prompt renomination of others
to fill the vacancies just created, and once these
were confirmed by the Senate there could be no
appeal. The detachment led by Brevet Lieuten
ant-Colonel Lawrence, so later said the Texas
papers, had covered itself with glory, but in its
pursuit of the fleeing Indians it had gone far to
the northeast and so came home by a route no man
had dreamed of, and Lawrence, spurring eagerly
ahead, rode in at night to fold his motherless little
ones to his heart, and found loving army women
aiding their faithful old nurse in ministering to
them, but read disaster in the tearful eyes and
faltering words that welcomed him.
Then he was ill a fortnight, and then he had
to go. He could not, would not believe the order
final. He clung to the hope that he would find
at Washington a dozen men who knew his war
14 ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
record, who could remember his gallant services
in a dozen battles, his popularity and prominence
in the Army of the Potomac. Everybody knows
the favorite aide-de-camp of a corps commander
when colonels go begging for recognition, and
everybody has a cheery, cordial word for him so
long as he and his general live and serve together.
But that proves nothing when the general is gone.
Colonels who eagerly welcomed and shook hands
with the aide-de-camp and talked confidentially
with him about other colonels in days when he
rode long hours by his general's side, later passed
him by with scant notice, and "always thought
him a much overrated man." Right here at Fort
Worth were fellows who, six or seven years be
fore, would have given a month's pay to win Ned
Lawrence's influence in their behalf, — for, like
"Perfect" Bliss of the Mexican war days, Law
rence was believed to write his general's de
spatches and reports, — but who now shrank un
easily out of his way for fear that he should ask
a favor.
Even Brooks, who liked and had spoken for
him, drew back from the window when with slow,
heavy steps the sad-faced, haggard man came
slowly along the porch. The orderly sprang up
and stood at salute just as adjutant's call sounded,
and the band pealed forth its merry, spirited
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 15
music. For a moment the new-comer turned and
glanced back over the parade, now dotted with
little details all marching out to the line where
stood the sergeant-major; then he turned, en
tered the building, and paused with hopeless eyes
and pallid, careworn features at the office door
way. His old single-breasted captain's frock-coat,
with its tarnished silver leaves at the shoulders,
hung loosely about his shrunken form. The
trousers, with their narrow welt of yellow at the
seam, looked far too big for him. His forage-cap,
still natty in shape, was old and worn. His chin
and cheeks bristled with a stubbly grayish beard.
All the old alert manner was gone. The once
bright eyes were bleary and dull. Neighbors said
that poor Ned had been drinking deep of the con
tents of a demijohn a sympathetic soul had sent
him, and half an eye could tell that his lip was
tremulous. The colonel arose and held out his
hand.
"Come in, Lawrence, old fellow, and tell me
what I can do for you." He spoke kindly, and
Brooks, too, turned towards the desolate man.
"You've done — all you could — both of yon.
God bless you!" was the faltering answer. "I've
come to say I start at once. I'm going right to
"Washington to have this straightened out. I
want to thank you, colonel, and you too, Brooks^
IQ A TROOPER GALAHAD.
for all your willing help. I'll try to show my
appreciation of it when I get back."
"But Ada and little Jim, Lawrence; surely
they're not ready for that long journey yet/' said
Frazier, thinking sorrowfully of what his wife
had told him only the day before, — that they had
no decent winter clothing to their names.
"It's all right. Old Mammy stays right here
with them. She has taken care of them, you
know, ever since my poor wife died. I can keep
my old quarters a month, can't I?" he queried,
with a quivering smile. " Even if the order isn't
revoked, it would be a month or more before any
one could come to take my place. Mrs. Blythe
will look after the children day and night."
Frazier turned appealingly to Brooks, who
shook his head and refused to speak, and so the
colonel had to.
" Lawrence, God knows I hate to say one word
of discouragement, but I fear — I fear you'd bet
ter wait till next week's stage and take those
poor little folks with you. I've watched this
thing. I know how a dozen good fellows, confi
dent as yourself, have gone on to "Washington and
found it all useless."
"It can't be useless, sir," burst in the captain,
impetuously. "Truth is truth and must prevail.
If after all my years of service I can find no
A TROOPER GALAHAD. tf
friends in the War Office, then life is a lie and a
sham. Senator Hall writes me that he will leave
no stone unturned. No, colonel, I take the stage
at noon to-day. "Will you let Winn ride with me
as far as Castle Peak? Fve got to run down and
see Fuller now."
"Winn can go with you, certainly; but indeed,
Lawrence, I shall have to see you again about
this."
"I'll stop on the way back," said Lawrence,
nervously. "Fuller promised to see me before
he went out to his ranch." And hastily the cap
tain turned away.
For a moment the two seniors stood there
silently gazing into each other's eyes. "What
can one do or say?" asked the colonel, at last. " I
suppose Fuller is going to let him have money for
the trip. He can afford to, God knows, after all
he's made out of this garrison. But the question
is, ought I not to make poor Lawrence understand
that it's a gone case? He is legally out already.
His successor is on his way here. I got the letter
this morning."
"On his way here? Who is he?" queried the
major, in sudden interest. "They didn't know
when Stone came through San Antonio ten days
ago."
"Man named Barclay; just got his captaincy
2
13 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
in the 30th, — but was consolidated out of that, of
course."
"Barclay — Barclay, you say?" ejaculated the
major, in excitement. ""Well, of all the "
"Of all the what?" demanded the colonel, im
patiently. " Nothing wrong with him, I hope."
"Wrong? No, or they wouldn't have dubbed
him Galahad. But, talk about ups and downs in
Texas, this beats all. Does Winn know?"
" I don't know that any one knows but you and
me," answered the veteran, half testily. " What's
amiss? What has Winn to do with it?"
"Blood and blue blazes! Why, of course you
couldn't know. Three years ago Barclay believed
himself engaged to a girl, and she threw him
over for Winn, and now we'll have all three of
them right here at Worth."
CHAPTER II.
IN spite of what Colonel Frazier could say,
Captain Lawrence had gone the long and devious
journey to Washington. Those were the days
when the lumbering stage-coach once a week, or
a rattling ambulance, bore our army travellers
from the far frontier to San Antonio. Another
trundled and bumped them away to the Gulf. A
Morgan Line steamer picked them up and tossed
and rolled with them to the mouth of the Missis
sippi and unloaded them at New Orleans, whence
by dusty railway journey of forty-eight hours or
more they could hope to reach the North. The
parting between Lawrence and his tall slip of a
daughter and boisterous little Jimmy was some
thing women wept over in telling or hearing, for
only two looked on, well-nigh blinded, — Mrs.
Blythe, who had been devoted to their mother,
and old " Mammy," who was devoted to them all.
A month had rolled by, and the letters that came
from Lawrence from San Antonio and Indianola
and New Orleans had been read by sympathizing
friends to the children. Then all awaited the
news from Washington. Every one knew he
19
20 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
would wire to Department Head-Quarters the
moment the case was settled in his favor; but the
days went by without other tidings, and the
croakers who had predicted ill success were
mournfully happy. February passed, March was
ushered in; orders came transferring certain por
tions of Frazier's big command, and certain new
officers began to arrive to fill the three or four
vacancies existing, but the new captain of Troop
"D" of the cavalry had not yet appeared. His
fame, however, had preceded him, and all Fort
Worth was agog to meet him. Brooks knew but
a modest bit of his story, and what he knew he
kept from every man but Frazier, yet had had to
tell his wife. The Winns were silent on the sub
ject. Winn himself was a man of few intimates,
— a young first lieutenant of cavalry, — and the
tie that bound him to Lawrence was the fact that
he and Kitty Tyrrell were first-cousins, their
mothers sisters, and Winn, a tall, athletic, slender
fellow, frank, buoyant, handsome, and connected
with some of the best names in the old army, was
one of the swells of his class at the Point and the
beau among all the young officers the summer of
his graduation, — the summer that Laura Waite,
engaged to Brevet Captain Galbraith Barclay of
the Infantry, came from the West to visit rela
tives at that enchanting spot, spent just six weeks
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 21
there, and, after writing letters all one month to
close her absent lover's eyes, wound up by writing
one that opened them. She was a beautiful girl
then; she was a lovely-looking woman now, but
the bloom was gone. The brilliant eyes were
often clouded, for Harry Winn was "his aunt
Kitty all over," said many a man who knew them
both. Their name was impecuniosity. That
Mrs. "Winn could tell much about the coming
captain letters from other regiments informed
more than one bright woman at Worth; but that
the young matron would tell next to nothing,
more than one woman, bright or blundering, dis
covered on inquiry. Only one officer now at the
post had ever served with Barclay, and that was
Brooks, who became tongue-tied so soon as it was
settled beyond peradventure that Captain Gal-
braith Barclay from the unassigned list had been
gazetted to the 12th Cavalry, Troop "D," vice
Lawrence, honorably discharged. But Brooks
had letters, so had Frazier, from old officers who
had served with the transferred man. Some of
these letters referred to him in terms of admira
tion, while another spoke of him unhesitatingly as
"more kinds of a damned fool" than the writer
had ever met. Yerily, various men have various
minds.
Presently, however, there came a man who
22 ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
could tell lots about Barclay, whether lie knew
anything or not, and that was one of the new
transfers, Lieutenant Hodge by title and name.
Hodge said he had served with the 30th along
the Union Pacific, and had met Barclay often.
In his original regiment Mr. Hodge had been re
garded as a very monotonous sort of man, a fellow
who bored his hearers to death, and the contrast
between his reception in social circles in the regi
ment he had left, and that accorded him here at
Worth so soon as it was learned that he knew
Barclay, inspired Mr. Hodge to say that these peo
ple were worth knowing; they had some life and
intelligence about them. The gang he had left
in "Wyoming were a stupid lot of owls by com
parison. For a week Hodge was invited to din
ner by family after family, and people dropped
in to spend the evening where he happened to be,
for Hodge held the floor and talked for hours
about Barclay, and what he had to tell was inter
esting indeed; so much so, said Brooks, that some
of it was probably a preposterous lie. To begin
with, said Hodge, Captain Barclay was rich, very-
rich, fabulously rich, perhaps; nobody knew how
rich, and nobody would have known he was rich
at all, judging from the simplicity and strict
economy of his life. In fact, it was this simplicity
and strict economy that had given rise to the belief
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 23
that existed for a year or two after he joined the
30th that he was hampered either with debts or
with dependent relatives. Relatives they knew he
had, because sisters sent their boys to visit him at
Sanders, and he took them hunting, fishing, etc.;
from these ingenuous nephews the ladies learned
of others, nephews, nieces, sisters, cousins, aunts,
who wrote long letters to Uncle Gal, and the mail
orderly said he left more letters at Captain Bar
clay's quarters than at anybody's else. So Fort
Sanders dropped the theory of debts and adopted
that of dependants, and that held good for the
first year of his service with them. He had joined
from the volunteers, where he had risen to the
grade of major. He was " pious," said Hodge, —
wouldn't drink, smoke, chew, play cards, or swear,
— thought they ought to have services on Sun
day. He left the roistering bachelors' mess soon
after his reaching the post, and had ever since
kept house, his cook and housemaid being one old
darky whom he had " accumulated" in the South
during the war, — a darky who had been well-
taught in the household of his old master, and
who became extravagantly attached to the new.
Hannibal could cook, wait at table, and tend door
to perfection, but he had to learn the duties of
second girl when his master joined the 30th in
far Wyoming, and that was the only time a
24 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
breach was threatened. Hannibal's dignity was
hurt. He had been body-servant in the ante
bellum days, butler, cook, coachman, and hostler,
but had never done such chores as Marse Barclay
told him would fall to his lot when that reticent
officer set up his modest establishment. Hannibal
sulked three days, and even talked of leaving.
The lieutenant counted out a goodly sum, all Han
nibal's own, and told him that he would find the
balance banked in his name in the distant East
whenever he chose to quit; then Hannibal broke
down, and was speedily broken in. All this had
Hodge heard when the dames of Sanders and
those of Steele or Russell were comparing notes
and picnicking together along that then new won
der of the world, the Union Pacific. But all this
was only preliminary to what came later.
Little detachments, horse and foot, were scat
tered all over the line of the brand-new railway
while it was being built ; every now and then the
Indians jumped their camps and working-parties,
and in the late fall of '67 Barclay had a stiff and
plucky fight with a band of Sioux; he was se
verely wounded, but beat them off, and was sent
East to recuperate. Now came particulars Hodge
could not give, but that letters could and did. It
was while Barclay was convalescing at Omaha
Barracks that he met Miss Laura Waite,-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 25
beautiful girl and a garrison belle. She was ten
years his junior. This was her first winter in
army society. She had spent her girl years at
school, and now was having "simply a heavenly
time," if her letters could be believed. Her
father was a field officer of cavalry with rather a
solemn way of looking at life, and her mother was
said to be the explanation of much of his solem
nity, — she being as volatile as he was staid. She
too had been a beauty, and believed that beauty
a permanent fixture. But Laura was fresh and
fair, sweet and winsome, light-hearted and joy
ous, and the father for a time took more pride in
her than he did in his sons. Major Waite was
in command of the cantonment from which the
relief party was sent when the news came that
Barclay and his little detachment were "cor
ralled." Major Waite became enthusiastic over
the details of the cool, courageous, brainy defence
made by the young officer against tremendous
odds, covered him with all manner of thoughtful
care and attention when he was brought into the
cantonment, then, when the winter soon set in
and the camp broke up, and "Waite went back to
Omaha Barracks, he took Barclay with him to
his house instead of the hospital, and the rest fol
lowed as the night the day.
Barclay spent a month under the major's roof,
26 ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
won his esteem and friendship, but left his
heart in the daughter's hands. If ever a man
devotedly loved a beautiful, winsome young girl,
that man was Galbraith Barclay; if ever a girl's
father approved of a man, that man was Bar
clay; and if ever a man had reason to hope
that his suit would win favor in a father's eyes,
that man was Barclay; yet it did not. Major
Waite's reply to the modest yet most manful
plea of Lieutenant Barclay to be permitted to
pay his addresses to the major's daughter sur
prised every one to whom Mrs. Waite confided it,
and they were not few. The old soldier begged
of the younger not to think of it, at least just yet.
But when it transpired that the younger had been
most seriously thinking of it and could think of
nothing else, then the major changed his tune
and told him what he did not tell his wife; and
that only became known through the father's own
intemperate language long months after. He
told Barclay he knew no man to whom he would
rather intrust his daughter's happiness, but he
feared, he believed, she was still too young to
know her own mind, too young to see in Barclay
what he saw, and he urged that the young officer
should wait. But Barclay knew Ms own mind.
He was able, he said, to provide for her in com
fort either in or out of the army, which few pos-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 27
sible aspirants could say. He would listen to no
demur, and then at last the father said, "Try
your fate if you will, but let there be no thought
of marriage before she is twenty, — before she can
have had opportunity of seeing something of the
world and of other men, — not these young whip-
persnappers just joining us here.7'
It was a surprise to him that Laura should ac
cept Mr. Barclay. She came to him, her father,
all happy smiles and tears and blushes, and told
him how proud and glad a girl she was, because
she thought her lover the best and noblest man
she ever dreamed of except her own dear old dad.
For a time Waite took heart and hoped for the
best, and believed her and her mother, as indeed
they believed themselves; and when Barclay went
back to Sanders at the end of January he was a
very happy man, and Laura for a week a very
lonely girl. Then youth, health, elasticity, vi
vacity, opportunity, all prevailed, and she began
to take notice in very joyous fashion. She did
not at all recognize the doctrine preached by cer
tain mammas and certain other damsels, that she
as an engaged girl should hold aloof now and give
the other girls, not so pretty, a chance. The bar
racks were gay that winter: Laura danced with
the gayest, and when Barclay got leave in April
and came down for a fortnight he found himself
28 4 TROOPER GALAHAD.
much in the way of two young gentlemen who
danced delightfully, a thing he could not do at
all. Yet he had sweet hours with his sweetheart,
and grew even more deeply in love, so beautiful
was she growing, and went back to Sanders a
second time thinking himself happiest of the
happy, or bound to be when, in the coming au
tumn, he could claim her as his own. But Waite
was troubled. He was to take the field the 1st
of May; his troops would be in saddle and on
scout away to the west all summer long; his wife
and daughter were to spend those months at the
sea-shore and in shopping for the great event to
come in November. He had a long, earnest talk
with Barclay when once more the devoted fellow
came to see the lady of his love on the eve of her
departure for the East, but Barclay looked into
her radiant, uplifted eyes, and could not read the
shadow of coming events, of which she was as
ignorant as he. In May he led his men on the
march to the Big Horn, and in June she led with
Cadet Lieutenant Winn the german at the gradu
ation hop at West Point. Then Winn was as
signed to duty, as was the custom of the day, one
of two or three young graduates chosen as assist
ant instructors during the summer camp. He
had an hour to devote to drill each morning and
a dozen to devote to the girls, and Laura Wafte,
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 29
with her lovely face and form, was the talk of
the brilliant throng of visitors that summer. She
and her mother returned to the Point as guests
of some old friends there stationed, a visit which
was not on the original programme at all. Winn
took the girl riding day after .day, and to hops
week after week. The shopping for the wedding
went on betweentimes, and Winn even escorted
them to the city and took part in the shopping.
In fine, when November came, in spite of the
furious opposition of her father, in spite of. his
refusal to attend the ceremony or to countenance
it in any way, "Winn, vice Barclay, honorably dis
charged, appeared as groom, and bore his bride
away to a round of joyous festivities among army
friends in New Orleans and San Antonio before
their final exile to the far frontier. From that
day to this no line had ever come from the
angered and aging man, even when Laura's baby
girl was born. Funds he sent from time to time,
— he knew he'd have to do that, as he told her
mother and she told her friends, — and then, just
as more funds were much needed because of press
ing claims of creditors whose bills had not been
paid from previous remittances, Winn being
much in the field and Laura becoming disburser
general in his absence, the major suddenly died,
leaving a small life insurance for his disconsolate
30 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
widow and nothing to speak of for his children.
They had sucked him dry during his busy life.
The Winns did not invite Mr. Hodge to din
ner, and were not bidden to meet him. Laura
was still in light mourning for her father, and
for days she really heard very little of Hodge's
revelations regarding her discarded Wyoming
lover. It was through the nurse-girl, an old
soldier's daughter, that she first began to glean
the chaff of the stories flitting from house to
house, and to hear the exaggeration of Hodge's
romancings about Captain Barclay's wealth, for
that, after all, proved the most vividly interesting
of the travellers' tales he told. Barclay proved
to be, said Hodge, an expert mineralogist and
geologist, and this was of value when a craze for
dabbling in mining stocks swept over Sanders.
Barclay, who lived so simply in garrison, was dis
covered (through a breach of confidence on the
part of the officiating clergyman, that well-nigh
led to another breach) to be the principal sub
scriber to the mission church being built in
Laramie City. It suddenly became known that
Barclay had a balance in the local bank and re
serve funds at the East, whereupon promoters
and prospectors by the dozen called upon him at
the fort and strove to induce him to take stock in
their mines. Nine out of ten were sent to the
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 3^
right-about, even those who called his attention to
the fact that Colonel This and Major That were
large shareholders. One or two he gave ear to,
and later got leave of absence and visited their
distant claims. He was out prospecting, said
Hodge, half the time in the fall of '68. The
ventures of the other officers seemed to prove
prolific sources of assessments. The Lord only
knows how much fun and money the mine-owners
of those days got out of the army. But they
failed to impress the puritanical captain, and by
the summer of '69 they ceased to do business in
his neighborhood, for before sending good money
after bad, officers had taken to consulting Bar
clay, and many an honest fellow's hoarded savings
were spared to his wife and children, all through
Barclay's calm and patient exposition of the fal
lacy of the " Company's" claims.
Then, said Hodge, when Channing, of the
27th, was killed by Red Cloud's band back of
Laramie Peak, and his heart-broken widow and
children were left penniless, somebody found the
money to send them all to their friends in New
England and to see them safely established there.
And when Porter's wife was taken so ill while he
was away up north of the Big Horn, and the doc
tor said that a trained nurse must be had in the
first place, there came one from far Chicago; and
32 ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
later, after Porter reached the post, overjoyed to
find his beloved one slowly mending and so skil
fully guarded, the doctors told him she must be
taken to the sea-shore or the South, and, though
every one at Sanders knew poor Porter had not a
penny, it was all arranged somehow, and Emily
Porter came back the next winter a rosy, bloom
ing, happy wife. No one knew for certain that
all the needed money came from Barclay, but as
the Porters seemed to adore him from that time
on, and their baby boy was baptized Galbraith
Barclay, everybody had reason to believe it. If
Mrs. Winn ever wanted to experience the exhila
ration of hearing what other people thought of
her, she had only, said Mr. Hodge in confidence,
to turn Mrs. Porter loose on that subject.
Then, too, said Hodge, there was Ordnance
Sergeant Murphy and his family, burned out one
winter's night with all their savings, and the old
man dreadfully scorched in trying to rescue his
strong box from the flames. It must have been
Barclay who looked after the mother and kids all
the time the old man was moaning in hospital.
They moved him into a newly furnished and com
fortable shack inside of a fortnight, and the Mur-
phys had another saint on their domestic calendar,
despite the non-appearance of his name in the
voluminous records of their Church. All this and
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 33
more did Hodge tell of Barclay, as in duty bound,
he said, after first telling what other fellows long
said of him, — that he was close and mean, a prig,
a namby-pamby (despite the way he fought Crow-
Killer's warlike band), a wet blanket to garrison
joys, etc., etc.; and yet they really couldn't tell
why. He subscribed just as much to the hop
fund, though he didn't hop, — to the supper fund,
though he didn't sup, — to the mess fund for the
entertainment of visiting officers, though he clidn't
drink, — to the dramatic fund, though he couldn't
act, — to the garrison hunt, though they said he
couldn't ride. But he declined to give one cent
towards the deficiency bill that resulted when
Sanders entertained Steele at an all-night sym
posium at the sutler's and opened case after case
of champagne and smoked box after box of cigars.
" It was a senseless, soulless proceeding," said he,
with brutal frankness. "Half the money you
drank or smoked up in six hours could have
clothed and fed all the children in Sudstown for
six months."
"Lord, but they were mad all through," said
Hodge, when describing it. "There wasn't a
name they didn't call him all that winter."
"And yet I hear," said Mrs. Tremaine, a
woman Fort Worth loved and looked up to as the
— th did to Mrs. Stannard, " that for a long time
3
34 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
past they have called him Sir Galahad instead of
Galbraith."
"Oh," said Hodge, "that's one of old Glea-
son's jokes. He said they called him ' Gal I had'
when he went to Omaha and i Gal I hadn't' when
he got back," — a statement which sent Major
Brooks swearing sotto voce from the room.
" I don't know which I'd rather kick," said he,
"Hodge or Gleason. I'd rejoice in Barclay's
coming if it weren't — if Lawrence were only here,
if Winn were only away."
CHAPTER III.
AN unhappy man was Major Brooks that
gloomy month of March. The news from Wash
ington via Department Head-Quarters was most
discouraging as to Lawrence. He was both look
ing and doing ill. It seemed to "break him all
up," said a letter from a friend in the Adjutant-
GeneraFs office, that so few could be found to
urge the Secretary to do something for him.
What could they do? was the answer. Admit
ting that Lawrence had been grievously wronged,
"whose fault was it?" said the Secretary; "not
mine." He had only acted on the information
and recommendation of officers to whom this
work had been intrusted. If they had erred, he
should have been informed of it before. "How
could you be informed," said the Senator who
had championed the poor fellow's cause, "when
you resorted to a system that would have shamed
a Spaniard in the days of the Inquisition, or the
Bourbons with their lettres de cachet and the Bas-
tile?" No one dreamed that Lawrence was in
danger until he was done to death, and so, out of
money, out of clothes, out of hope, health, and
35
36 A. TROOPER GALAHAD.
courage, poor Ned was fretting his heart out,
while tender women and loyal friends were keep
ing guard over his shabby army home and caring
for his two motherless lambs away out on the far
frontier, awaiting the day when he should be re
stored to them.
It did not come, nor did Lawrence. An old
comrade of the Sixth Corps, a gallant volunteer
brigade commander, then in prosperous circum
stances at Washington, had given him the shelter
of his home, only too gladly keeping him in ra
tions and cigars, as he would have done in clothes
and pocket-money, but he shook his head at
whiskey. "For God's sake, Ned, and Tor your
babies' sake, leave that alone. It can't help you.
You never were a drinking man before. Don't
drink now, or your nerve will give out utterly."
This and more he urged and pleaded, but Law
rence's pride seemed crushed and his heart
broken. Legal advisers told his friends at last
that restoration was impossible: his place was
filled. He had only one course left if he would
listen to nothing but restoration to the army, and
that was to accept a second lieutenancy and be
gin over again at the bottom of the list. They
broached it to him, and he broke out into wild,
derisive laughter. "Good God! do you mean that
a man who has served fifteen years in the army,
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 37
fought all through the war and served as I have
served, must step down from the squadron cap
taincy to ride behind the boys just out of the
Point? be ranked out of quarters by my own son-
in-law the next thing I know! I'll see the army
in hell first," was his furious reply.
"No, Ned, not hell, but Texas. Take it; go
back to the line, and once you're back in the army
in any grade we'll legislate you up to the majority
you deserve: see if we don't."
But Lawrence had lost all faith in promises, or
in Congressional action. He turned in contempt
from the proposition, and in early April came the
tidings to San Antonio that he was desperately
ill.
Meanwhile Mr. Hodge had lost the prestige of
his first appearance at Worth, and fell into the
customary rut of the subaltern. People found him
as monotonous as did the martyrs of the Upper
Platte, and, from having been the most sought-
after of second lieutenants, he dropped back to
the plane of semi-obscurity. This was galling.
Hodge's stock in trade had been the facts or fa
bles in his possession concerning the absent Cap
tain Barclay, whose present whereabouts and
plans were shrouded in mystery. A rumor came
that he had decided not to join at all; that he
was In "Washington striving to arrange a transfer;
38 A TROOPEIt GALAHAD.
that his assignment to the regiment and to the
post where he must meet the woman who had
jilted him for a cavalry subaltern was something
unforeseen and not to be tolerated. The muster
roll couldn't account for him other than as per
mitted to delay three months by Special Orders
]STo. So-and-so, War Department, A.G.O., Janu
ary 25, 1871. This gave Hodge unlooked-for re
inforcements. A fortnight passed in March with
out a bid to dinner anywhere, without a request
for further particulars as to Sir Galahad. So
long as that interesting personage was expected
any day to appear and answer for himself, it be
hooved Hodge to be measurably guarded in his
statements, to keep within the limits of his au
thorities; but one day there came a letter from
a lady at Department Head-Quarters to Mrs.
Brooks, and before Brooks himself was made
aware of the contents, he being at the club-room
playing " pitch" and therefore beyond the pale of
feminine consideration, the news was going the
rounds of the garrison.
Mrs. Pelham, who was spending the winter in
Washington, had written to an old and devoted
friend of Major Waite's some very interesting
news about Captain Barclay. The captain was
in Washington a whole week, but had not called
on Mrs. Pelham, though she had done everything
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 39
she could think of for him when he was wounded.
(The Pelhams were then at McPherson and near
old Waite's summer camp, but no one ever heard
of her ladyship's ever taking the faintest interest
in Barclay until after he developed into a mine-
owner and had been jilted by Laura Waite.) But
let Mrs. Pelham talk for herself, as she usually
did, as well as for every one else. " He spent the
first week in February here, leaving just before
poor Captain Lawrence came. No wonder he
didn't wish to meet him! And Mrs. Waite was
there, buttonholing everybody to get her pension
increased, and wearing the costliest crape you
ever saw, my dear, and — think of it! — solitaire
diamond ear-rings with it! She had a room in
a house where several prominent Congressmen
boarded, and was known as 'the fascinating
widow.7 She sent to Barclay, — would you believe
it? — and begged him to come to see her, and he
actually did; and Mrs. Cutts, who lives in the
same house, told me that you ought to have seen
her that day, — no solitaire ear-rings or handsome
crape, mind you, but tears and bombazine; and
Mrs. Cutts vows that he gave her money. That
woman is angling for another husband, and has
been ever since poor "Waite's death, and if any
thing were to happen to Mr. Winn it's just what
Laura would be doing too. It runs in the blood,
40 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
my dear. You know, and I know, that all the
time she was at Omaha Barracks and the major
in the field, she — a woman with a grown son and
a graduating daughter — was dancing with the
boys at the hops and riding — yes, and buggy-
riding — with bachelors like those wretches Gates
and Hagadorn." Buggy-riding was the unpar
donable sin in Mrs. Pelham's eyes, she being " too
massive to sit in anything short of the side seat
of an ambulance," as said a regimental wit; and
Mrs. Pelham looked with eyes of disfavor on
women who managed to "keep their waists" as
Mrs. Waite did.
"But let me tell you about Captain Barclay,"
continued the letter. " General Corliss called to
see me two evenings ago and said he heard that
Barclay was actually a millionaire, — that he had
large interests in Nevada mines that were proving
fabulously rich. You can understand that I
wasn't at all surprised to hear that the general
had intimated to Mr. Eay, of his staff, that it
would be much better for him to go and serve
with his regiment awhile. Kay wouldn't be an
acceptable son-in-law; he has no money and too
many fascinations, and there are both the Corliss
girls, you know, to be provided for, and Miranda
is already passe, and Ray has resigned the place,
and the place is vacant, for — would you believe
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 4^
it? — they say the general tendered it to Barclay,
and Barclay declined. Why, when we were all
at McPherson there wasn't anything satirical the
Corlisses didn't say about Barclay, and now that
he has money they bow down to and worship
him." (" Something Mrs. Pelham wouldn't do
for the world," said Mrs. Brooks to herself, with
an odd smile.) " And when the general was asked
about it yesterday he couldn't deny having made
the offer, but said the reason Captain Barclay de
clined was that he would very probably resign in
a few weeks, his business interests being such as
to render it necessary for him to leave the army.
So, my dear, you won't have the millionaire in
Texas, after all, and I fancy how deeply Laura
Winn will be disappointed. JSTo matter how much
she cares for her husband, she wouldn't be Jier
mother's daughter if she didn't try to fascinate
him over again."
Fancy the comfort of having such a letter as
that to read to an appreciative audience! Mrs.
Brooks fled with it to Mrs. Frazier, who thought
it ought not to be read, — it was too like Dorothy
Pelham for anything. But Mrs. Brooks took and
read it to neighbors who were chatting and sew
ing together and had no such scruples. And that
night it was dribbling about the post that Barclay
had decided to resign, had refused a detail on the
42 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
staff of General Corliss: somebody else would get
Ned Lawrence's troop. Brooks heaved a sigh and
said to himself he was glad of it, and the women
heaved a sigh and wished he might have come, if
only for a little while, just to make things inter
esting: "it would be such a novelty to have a
millionaire mine-owner in garrison and actually
doing duty as a captain of cavalry.'7 Finally they
began to wonder what Mrs. Winn would say now,
she having had nothing at all to say.
That very evening it chanced to occur to Mr.
Hodge that he had not returned Lieutenant
Winn's call (by card, — the cavalryman having
dropped in when he knew the new arrival to have
dropped out), and when Hodge presented himself
at the Winns' (he had spoken of his intention at
mess in the presence and hearing of the negro at
tendant, who had mentioned it without delay to
the Winns' colored combination of cook and
serving-maid, who had come over to borrow a cup
of cooking sherry, it being too far to the sutler's,
and that damsel had duly notified her mistress of
the intended honor), he was shown into the dimly
lighted army sitting-room, where, toasting her
feet before the fire, sat dreaming the young mis
tress of the establishment, who started up in ap
parent surprise. She had heard neither the step
nor the ring. Very possibly she was dozing, she
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 43
admitted, for baby was sleeping aloft and her
husband was gone. She was attired in a silken
gown that Hodge described somewhat later at the
major's as "puffickly stunning," — a garment that
revealed the rich curves of her beautiful throat
and neck and arms; women who heard wondered
why she should be wearing that most becoming
evening robe when there was not even a hop.
She looked handsomer than the gown, said Hodge,
as she rose and greeted him, her cheeks flushed,
her eyes languorous and smouldering at first, then
growing slowly brilliant. She apologized for the
absence of Mr. Winn. He was spending much
time at the office just now. "He is regimental
commissary, you know, or at least he has been,"
she explained. Hodge knew all about that, and
he also knew that if what he heard about the post
was true it would have been better had Winn
spent more time at the office before. Then Mrs.
Winn was moved to be gracious. She had heard
so many, many pleasant things of Mr. Hodge
since his arrival. She was so honored that he
should call when he must be having so many
claims on his time, so many dinner-calls to pay.
She and Mr. Winn were so sorry they had been
unable to entertain Mr. Hodge, but, until the
cook they were expecting from San Antonio came,
they were positively starving, and could invite no
44 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
one to share their scraps. "That cook has been
expected a whole year," said other women, but
Mrs. Winn paraded him as the cause of her social
short-comings as confidently as ever. Then Mrs.
Winn went on to speak of how much she had
heard of Hodge at Omaha, — dear Omaha.
""What lovely times we had along the Platte in
the good old days!" Hodge blushed with joy,
and preened and twittered and thought how
blessed a thing it was to be welcomed to the fire
side of such a belle and beauty and to be remem
bered by her as one of the gay young bachelors at
Sidney. " Such wicked stories as we heard of you
scapegraces from time to time," said she, whereat
Hodge looked as though he might, indeed, have
been shockingly wicked, as perhaps he had. In
deed, she feared they, the young officers, were " a
sad lot, a sad lot," and looked up at him from
under the drooping lashes in a way that prompted
him to an inspiration that was almost electric in
its effect on him. Hodge fairly seemed to sparkle,
to scintillate. "Sad! We were in despair," said
he, " but that was when we heard of your engage
ment — oh, ah, the second one, I mean," he stum
bled on, for it would never do, thought he, to
mention the first.
But he need have had no hesitation. Laura
Winn had heard from other and obscurer sources
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 45
something of the rumors floating over the post
that very day. She had planned to drop in at
the colonel's, where the Fraziers entertained at
dinner and music that very evening, in hopes of
hearing accidentally something definite, for Winn
was one of those useless husbands who never hear
anything of current gossip. But women might
not talk if they thought she wished to hear, and
fate had provided her a better means. She saw
here and now the opportunity and the man. It
was Hodge who had told so much that was of
vivid interest to her. It was Hodge she had been
longing to meet for days, but Winn had held him
aloof, and now here she had this ingenuous reposi
tory of Barclayisms all to herself until Winn
should return; the chance was not to be lost.
"I love to live over those dear old days when
I was a girl," she said. "Friends seemed so real
then, men so true, life so buoyant. Sometimes
I find myself wishing there were more of the old
friends, the old set, here. We seem — so much
more to each other, don't you know, Mr. Hodge?"
And Hodge felt sure "we" did, and hitched his
chair a foot nearer the fire.
"Of course I was younger then, and knew so
little of the world, and yet, knowing it as I do
now — I can say this to you, you know, Mr.
Hodge, — I couldn't to another soul here, for you
46 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
were of us, you served with father's column"
(Hodge's service was limited .to playing poker
with "those wretches Gates and Hagadorn" and
others of Waite's command on one or two mem
orable occasions, and the resultant hole in his
purse was neither as broad as a church nor deep
as a well, but 'twould serve). "I've often felt
here as though I would give anything to see some
of the dear old crowd; not that people are not
very lovely here, but, you know, we army friends
cling so to the old associations." And now the
beautiful eyes seemed almost suffused, and Hodge
waxed eloquent.
" I am thrice fortunate," said he, recalling the
lines of his Maltravers, "in that I am numbered
among them." And now, like Laura, he looked
upon Worth as cold and dormant as compared
with the kindling friendships of the distant
Platte.
"Indeed you are!" said she. "You bring back
the sweetest days of my life, and some of the
saddest. I have no one to speak to me, you know,
—of course — until you did a moment ago. Tell
me, is — is his life so changed as — as they say
it is?"
" I never saw a man so broke up," he responded.
" He never smiled after you — after — after it was
broken off, you know." Barclay's smile was as
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 47
rare as a straight flush anyhow, he admitted to
himself, but the assertion sounded well.
"And — of late — what have you heard of him?"
she asked. And Hodge poured forth his latest
news, and added more. He, too, he said, had had
a letter from an intimate friend. Captain Bar
clay had declared that the assignment to the
Twelfth Cavalry was impossible, Texas was im
possible. His business interests would necessitate
his declining if, indeed, there were no other
reasons. General Corliss had tendered him the
position of aide-de-camp and made Billy Eay of
the — th resign to make way for him, and the
moment Barclay found that out he went to Ray
and told him the whole business was without his
(Barclay's) knowledge, and sooner than displace
him he would refuse. " Yes," said Hodge, " that's
the way my friend heard it from Ray himself.
ISTow, if Barclay could only get a detail on Mc
Dowell's staff in California it would have suited
him to a tee; then he could have looked after his
Nevada interests and his Wyoming pensioners
too."
Did Mr. Hodge know surely about Mr. Bar
clay's wealth? "Was it all true? he was asked.
Oh, yes, there wasn't a doubt of it, said Hodge.
It was just another of those cases where a man
had money in abundance, and yet would have
48 4 TROOPER GALAHAD.
given it all, he added, sentimentally, but here she
uplifted rebukingly her white, slim hand,— or
was it warningly? for there came a quick footfall
on the porch without. The hall door opened
sharply, letting in a gust of cold night wind, and,
throwing off his cavalry cape with its faded yel
low lining, Lieutenant Winn strode through the
hallway into his little den at the rear.
uYou will come and see me again/' she mur
mured low, while yet the footsteps resounded, "it
has been so — good to see you, — so like old times.
We'll have to talk of other things now. Mr.
"Winn doesn't like old times too well."
But Mr. Winn never so much as looked in the
parlor door until she called to him. Then, as
she saw his face, the young wife arose with
anxiety in her own.
"What is it? Where are you going — with
your revolver, too? Mr. Hodge, dear."
" Oh-h ! Beg pardon, Mr. Hodge. Glad to see
you," was Winn's distraught acknowledgment of
the presence of the visitor, as he extended a re
luctant hand. "My sergeant can't be found," he
went on, hurriedly. "They say he's gone to Ful
ler's ranch, and it may be all right, but the colo
nel has ordered out a patrol to fetch him back.
Don't worry, Laurie; I may have to ride out with
it."
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 49
And hurriedly lie kissed her and bounded down
the steps.
For a moment she stood in the doorway, the
light from the hall lamp shining on her dusky
hair and proud, beautiful face, forgetful of the
man who stood gazing at her. Then with a shiver
she suddenly turned.
"It's the second time that Sergeant Marsden
has been missed in just this way, when he was
most needed, and — it's so imprudent, so — and my
husband is so imprudent, so unsuspicious. Mr.
Hodge," she cried, impulsively, "if you've heard
anything, or if you do hear anything, about him
or Mr. Winn, be a friend to me and tell me, won't
you?" And there was nothing Hodge would not
have promised, nothing he would not have told,
but the door of the adjoining quarters slammed,
an officer came striding along the porch common
to the double set, and the clank of a sabre was
heard as he neared them.
"Winn gone?" he asked. "Don't worry, Mrs.
Winn. "We'll overhaul that scoundrel before he
can reach the settlements, unless "
"But what is wrong? "What has happened,
Mr. Brayton?" she asked, her face white with
dread, her heart fluttering.
"My Lord, Mrs. Winn, I beg your pardon! I
supposed of course he had told you. Marsden's
50 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
bolted. Colonel Eiggs, the inspector-general, got
here to-night with Captain Barclay, instead of
coming by regular stage Saturday, and Marsden
lit out the moment he heard of their arrival. Of
course we hope Winn isn't badly bitten."
But her thoughts were of another matter now.
"Captain Barclay," she faltered, "here? Why,
I—I heard "
"Yes," shouted the young officer, as he went
clattering down the steps. " 'Scuse me — I've got
to mount at once," as an orderly came running up
at the moment with his horse. " Eiggs has come,
post-haste, only Barclay and one man with him
besides the driver. It's lucky that Friday gang
never got wind of it."
OHAPTEK IV.
FOE forty-eight hours Fort Worth was in tur
moil. To begin with, the sudden, unheralded
advent of a department inspector in those days
meant something ominous, and from Frazier
down to the drum-boys the garrison scented mis
chief the moment that familiar old black-hooded,
dust-covered spring wagon, drawn by the famous
six-mule team, came spinning in across the mesa
just after retreat, no escort whatever being in
sight. Cavalrymen had trotted alongside, said
Eiggs, from two of the camps on the way, but
they had made that long day's drive from
Crockett Springs all alone, trusting to luck that
the Friday gang, so called, would not get wind of
it. Just who and how many constituted that
array of outlaws no man, including its own mem
bership, could accurately say. Two paymasters,
two wagon-trains, and no end of mail-stages had
been " jumped" by those enterprising road agents
in the course of the five years that followed the
war, and not once had a conviction occurred. Ar
rests had been made by marshals, sheriffs, and
officers in command of detachments, but a more
innocent lot of victims, according to the testi-
51
52 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
mony of friends and fellow-citizens, never dwelt
in Dixie. Three only of their number had been
killed and left for recognition in the course of
those three years. One only of these was known,
and the so-called Friday gang managed to sur
round its haunts, its movements, and its member
ship with a mystery that defied civil officials and
baffled the military. Escorts the size of a cavalry
platoon had been needed every time a disbursing
officer went to and fro, and a sizable squad accom
panied the stage whenever it carried even a
moderate amount of treasure. At three points
along the road from the old Mexican capital to
the outlying posts, strong detachments of cavalry
had been placed in camp, so that relays of escorts
might be on hand when needed. At three dif
ferent times within the past two years, strong
posses had gone with the civil officials far into the
foot-hills in search of the haunts of the band, but
no occupied haunt was ever found, no band of any
size or consequence ever encountered; yet depre
dations were incessant. The mail-stage came and
went with guarded deliberation. The quarter
master's trains were accompanied by at least a
company of infantry. The sutler's wagons
travelled with the quartermaster's train, and the
sutler's money went to San Antonio only when
the quartermaster and commissary sent theirs,
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 53
and then a whole squadron had been known to
ride in charge. Anything from a wagon-train
down to a blackboard was game for the gang, and
soldiers, ranchmen, and prospectors told stories of
having been halted, overhauled, and searched by
its masked members at various times, and, whether
found plethoric or poor, having been hospitably
entertained as soon as robbed of all they pos
sessed. Only four days before Riggs made his
venturesome dash, three discharged soldiers, filled
with impatience and whiskey, had sought to run
the gauntlet to the camp at Crockett's, and came
back, in the robbers' cast-off clothing, to "take
on" for another term, having parted with their
uniforms and the savings of several years at the
solicitation of courteous strangers they met along
the route. Nothing but an emergency could have
brought Riggs, full tilt, for he was getting along
in years and loved the comforts of his army home.
Emergency it was, as he explained to Frazier
instantly on his arrival. The general had indu
bitable information that ranches to the south had
long been buying government stores, bacon, feed,
flour, coffee, etc. The source of their supply
could only be the warehouses at Worth, and
Marsden was a "swell" sergeant, whose airs and
affluence had made him the object of suspicion.
Those were the days when cavalry regiments had
54 ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
a commissary, but Congress did away with the
office, and Winn, whom an indulgent colonel had
detailed to that supposedly "soft snap" when
regimental head-quarters were stationed at Worth,
had been left there with his bulky array of
boxes and barrels when the colonel and staff
were transferred to a more southern post, the un
derstanding being that he was to turn over every
thing to Frazier's new quartermaster as soon as
that official should arrive. Frazier's appointee,
however, was a lieutenant from a distant station.
The War Department had not improved the ap
pointment when made. Correspondence had been
going on, and only within the week was notifica
tion received that the choice was finally confirmed
and that Lieutenant Trott would soon arrive.
Meantime Winn remained, but the stores were
going. Somebody had money enough to bribe
the sentries nightly posted at the storehouse at
the northern corner of the big rectangle, and
wagon-load after wagon-load must have been
driven away. Outwardly, as developed by the
count made early on the morning following
Riggs's coming, all was right, but a veteran
cavalry sergeant scoffingly knocked in the heads
of cask, box, and barrel, and showed how bacon
by the cord had been replaced by rags and boul
ders, sugar, coffee, and flour by bushels of sand,
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 55
molasses and vinegar by branch water, and tea
and tobacco by trash. "Two to three thousand
dollars' worth of rations gone/7 said Riggs, at
noon, "and the devil to pay if Winn cannot."
Vain the night ride to Fuller's ranch in search of
Marsden. That worthy had long since feathered
his portable nest, and on one of the quartermas
ter's best horses had left the post within the half-
hour of Riggs's coming, no man knew for what
point after once he crossed the ford. Hoof -tracks
by the hundred criss-crossed and zigzagged over
the southward mesa. Thick darkness had settled
down. Fuller's people swore no signs of him
had been seen, and, though patrols kept on all
night, poor Winn came back despairing an hour
before the dawn to face his fate; even»at noon he
had hardly begun to realize the extent of his over
whelming loss.
" Go home and try to sleep," said the colonel,
sadly, to the dumb and stricken man. " You can
do no good here. I'll send the doctor to you."
But Winn started up and shook the old fellow's
kindly hand. "I cannot go. My God! I must
know the whole business," he cried. "I cannot
sleep or eat a morsel."
"Whatever you do, don't drink," said Riggs,
in not unkindly warning. " Go and see your wife,
anyhow, for an hour or so. She has sent three
56 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
times." But words were useless. Sympathetic
comrades came and strove with him and said
empty words of hope or cheer, — empty, because
they knew poor Winn had not a soul in the world
to whom to look for help. Kin to half a dozen
old army names, it helped him not a whit, for no
one of them was blessed with means beyond the
monthly pay, and some had not even that un
mortgaged. Twenty-five hundred dollars' short
age already, to say nothing of the cash for recent
sales, and more, no doubt, to come. The very
thought was ruin. Eefusing comfort, the hapless
man sat down at his littered desk, stared again at
the crowded, dusty pigeon-holes, and saw nothing,
nothing but misery, if not despair.
Brayton went over at luncheon-time and
begged a word with Mrs. Winn. She peered
over the balustrade from the second story, with
big, black-rimmed eyes, but could not come down,
could not leave baby, who was fretful, she said.
Oh, why didn't Mr. Winn come home? What
good did it do to stay over there and worry?
When would they get through? Brayton couldn't
say, but Winn couldn't come, — felt he must stay
at the office; but if Mrs. Winn would have some
tea and a bite of luncheon prepared, he, Brayton,
would gladly take it over. Yet even this friendly
office seemed to bring no solace. Winn barely
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 57
sipped the tea or tasted the savory broth. Frazier
and Riggs went out to luncheon, leaving him still
seated at his desk; and their faces were black
with gloom when they reached the colonel's door.
Winn's distressing plight, following so shortly
after the dire misfortune that had happened to
Lawrence, would have saddened the whole gar
rison and tinged all table-talk with melancholy
but for the blessed antidote afforded in Captain
Barclay's sudden and most unlooked-for coming.
And what a surprise it was ! All one afternoon
and part of one evening had Fort Worth been tell
ing that Captain Barclay had refused the assign
ment to a regiment and post where he must meet
Laura Winn; that he had resigned rather than
encounter once more the woman who had played
him false; that he was too wealthy to care to bury
himself in this out-of-the-way hole in Texas any
how; and even while they were talking, all un
heralded, here he was. The major's hospitable
doors opened to receive him within ten minutes
of his dust-covered advent, and only by hearsay
all that night could the garrison know of his pres
ence. One small sole-leather trunk, with the
travelling-bag, rifle, field-glasses, canteen, and
lunch-box, constituted all the personal luggage
of the new arrival. It could not even be said
that any one outside of Brooks's had even seen
58 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
him, so coated with dust were the contents of that
old spring wagon when unloaded at the colonel's
steps; and many a woman hastened to her door
on the following morning, attracted thither by
the announcement that Captain Barclay was on
the major's porch.
There, with his host, he stood for quite a while,
the major pointing out the landmarks along the
westward range, and indicating, apparently, other
features in the landscape. One or two officers,
hastening by, raised their caps or ran up the
steps and shook hands with the new-comer, but
he was presently summoned in to breakfast, and
neighbors could only say he was not very tall, not
very stout, not very slight, not very anything.
Captain De Lancy, who had had three minutes'
conversation, said he " seemed pleasant," but that
was all. Mrs. De Lancy was confirmed in her
preconceived opinion that men were owls, be
cause her husband was unable to add to the mili
tary descriptive list of brown eyes, brown hair,
brown beard and clothes, any of the particulars
she sought. He couldn't tell whether Barclay
had fine teeth or good complexion, what his
mouth was like, whether he had nice hands and
voice. Indeed, he couldn't see why Mrs. De
Lancy should be so anxious to know. Not until
towards noon was any reliable particular concern-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 59
ing Captain Barclay passed along the line. Then
the domestic bulletin dealt out the fact that the
millionaire mine-owner wore a flannel shirt and
a silver watch, which information was distinctly
disheartening.
But that evening, while the colonel and other
officers began calling at Brooks's to welcome for
mally the unexpected addition to the commis
sioned force, Mrs. Brooks was able to slip out and
over to her crony, Mrs. De Lancy, and in ten
minutes she had an audience, married and single,
that gladdened her heart. She could and did talk
almost uninterruptedly for over an hour. Ar
riving dames or damsels were signalled not to in
terrupt, and, joining the circle, patiently with
held their questions until she paused for breath;
and then what every one seemed to want to know
was, had he said anything or asked anything about
Mrs. Winn? He had. He expressed the utmost
sympathy with poor Mr. Winn. He told Major
Brooks of a similar experience that occurred in
the — d Cavalry only the year previous, and how
it would probably take the defrauded officer years
to square the account. He most delicately in
quired as to the general health and well-being of
Mrs. Winn, whom he had had the pleasure, he
said, of meeting several years before; but more
particularly he had asked about Lawrence, and
60 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
Lawrence's children, and who was in ch-arge of
them; it was evident that he was deeply con
cerned about them and most anxious to meet Cap
tain and Mrs. Blythe.
"Well, that's one thing at least in his favor,"
was the verdict; for throughout Brooks's bat
talion, as it was then called, or squadron, as we
should call it to-day, there existed an indefinable
feeling of antagonism towards this stranger within
their gates, thus coming to usurp the place Ned
Lawrence held in their hearts and homes, if no
longer on their rolls. Some one slipped out and
brought in Mrs. Blythe, for whose benefit Mrs.
Brooks not unwillingly went over all she had told
about Captain Barclay's queries as to the children
and their benefactors; and that sweet, tender
hearted, motherly woman ought to have softened
to him, but didn't. "He could have heard it all
at San Antonio for the asking," she declared.
"But he didn't stop two days at San Antonio,"
explained Mrs. Brooks. "The moment he heard
that Colonel Eiggs was going on by special am
bulance he begged to be allowed to go with him,
and Riggs couldn't see a way to say no, and later
confessed he was very glad he had said yes."
"Brooks, you were all growling at the idea of
having any outsider, much less a doughboy, take
Lawrence's place," were the bluff old veteran's
A TROOPER GALAHAD. Ql
exact words; "but you mark what I say. I was
rather prejudiced against this young fellow my
self, and it has just taken this jolt together from
San Antonio to satisfy me he is grit to the back
bone, and you are in big luck to get him."
At least a dozen men called at the major's that
evening to pay their respects to the new comrade.
It was long after taps when the last one left, but,
almost to a man, they gathered at the club-room
later to compare notes. Hodge, of course, bad
called among the first, his claim of intimate or at
least old acquaintance rendering it necessary.
Barclay's brown eyes certainly lighted at the sight
of the face he had known in the far northwest;
he chatted for a moment with the infantryman,
and expressed his pleasure at meeting him again.
Then Blythe entered, with his grave, massive face
and courteous yet reserved manner; and Brooks
spoke of the fact that Barclay seemed to shake
hands more earnestly with him than with any of
the others, and to look at him oftener, though
striving to slight no one. They sat there, as men
will at such times, somewhat awkwardly, only one
speaking at once, and generally the same one.
Hodge, for instance, had much to say and many
questions to ask about fellows Ke had known in
Wyoming, and when he left and others came in,
three or four went at the same time, having sat
62 4 TROOPER GALAHAD.
stolid listeners, calmly studying Barclay with
their eyes and finally saying good-night, and
" hope to see you when you get settled," etc.
They were talking of him at the store, and
wondering when and where he would settle, and
whether he would take Lawrence's quarters, and
what would then become of Ada and little Jim,
who with old Mammy still occupied their rooms
there and had all the furniture as poor daddy left
it, but who went over to the Blythes' three times
a day to take their rations with their army chums
and playmates, the little Blythes. " What a god
send it would be if he would buy poor Ned's
books and furniture!" said De Lancy. "It would
yield enough to send those poor babies home."
"Home," said Blythe, sadly: "what home has
a child whose kith and kin are all of the army?
They have neither home nor mother."
But no man made the faintest comment on
facts the women remarked instanter, that Bar
clay's watch was only silver and his guard an in
expensive little cord or braid of fine leather, worn
about his neck; that his travelling suit was of
rough gray mixture, and his shirt a flannel neg
lige. But then, as Mrs. De Lancy explained in
extenuation of their blindness, he had donned his
uniform by the time they called that second even
ing, and it became him very well.
CHAPTEE V.
A WEEK went rapidly by. Captain Barclay
had gone on duty, and Mr. Brayton, his sub, had
not yet "sized him up." Lieutenant Trott, the
new regimental quartermaster, had arrived by the
Saturday's stage, and was ready to receipt to
Lieutenant Winn for all property he had to turn
over; but Winn had broken down under his
weight of woe and taken to his bed. From Wash
ington came tidings, telegraphed as far as San
Antonio, that Lawrence was slowly mending and
would soon be sitting up. Mrs. Winn, absorbed
in the care of her suffering husband, had accepted
no invitations, but the many sympathetic women
who called to ask if there were not some way in
which they could be of aid reported her as look
ing feverish and far from well. Some of them
had ventured to speak of the new arrival, and,
though her ears were evidently open, her lips
were closed. That she was willing, if not eager,
to hear anything they had to say or tell about
Captain Barclay was all very well as far as it
went, but what some of her visitors most desired
was to hear what she had to say about him \ as
63
64 ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
she would say nothing, one or two had resorted to
a little delicate questioning in the hope of draw
ing her out. Mrs. Faulkner, a young matron of
her own age and previous social standing, an army
girl like herself, and for some time her one inti
mate friend at Worth, went so far as to ask, " You
used to know him very well, did you not?" and
was checkmated by the answer, " Not well enough
to talk about/7 which answer Mrs. Faulkner pon
dered over and considered deliberately and inex
cusably rude. With the kindest feeling for her
in the world, as all the women avowed, and no
animosity whatever towards Barclay over and be
yond that feeling on poor Colonel Lawrence's ac
count, there was the liveliest interest at Worth
as regarded Mrs. Winn and Captain Barclay in
seeing what they would do; and, to the disap
pointment of all Fort Worth, they had done
nothing.
Barclay promptly returned the calls of the offi
cers who had called upon him, and had done all
proper homage to the wives of those who were
possessed of such blessings, but there were still
certain quarters where his face or his card had not
been seen: at Captain Cram's, for instance, be
cause that warrior was on scout and couldn't call,
ditto his lieutenant; at one or two of the new
and unpolished pillars of the temple, because they
A TROOPER GALAHAD. (55
had not known enough or had been too shy to
call; and at Winn's, because that officer was ill
of a fever and could not call. There was another
set of quarters in which he had not yet set foot,
— Ned Lawrence's; and that was the house most
people expected him to visit first.
Nor did he remain at Brooks's. The major's
house was big, but so was his household. "You
have a vacant room here, Mr. Brayton," he said,
the third day after his arrival, as he dropped in
at his subaltern's. " It may be a month before I
get shaken down into place. I dislike to disturb
women and children, and so have decided to ask
you to let me move my cot and trunk in here
awhile and to propose my name at the mess."
And Brayton, blushing, at the realization of the
fact that the furniture in the room referred to
consisted solely of some chairs, a square pine
table covered with a cavalry blanket, with a cigar-
box half full of smoking-tobacco, another half
full of white beans, and a pack of cards for its
sole ornaments, nevertheless bravely ushered his
new captain into the bower, and Barclay looked
neither surprised nor satirical at the sight. " We
sometimes play a mild game of draw here, sir,"
said downright Brayton, "which accounts for the
appearance of things; but my striker can clean
it up in ten minutes, and you are most welcome."
QQ A TROOPER GALAHAD.
"It won't put you out in any way?" asked Bar
clay, without the comment of an uplifted eye
brow on the evidence adduced.
" Not so much as poker, if it does at all," said
Brayton, promptly. He was determined his cap
tain should know the extent of his frailties at the
start.
Barclay smiled quietly and turned to the boy
with liking in his eye. "I'm hardly ten years
your senior, Brayton," said he, " and so shall not
preach, but I believe we can put that room to a
little better use."
The next day he took his seat at the bachelors'
mess, where a dozen officers were congregated, all
of them but two his juniors in rank. The side
board was lavishly decked with the indispensables
of that benighted day. The old-timers and the
new took their anteprandial cocktail or toddy,
and hospitably invited Barclay to join. Barclay
smiled gratefully, but said he had " never yet got
in the way of it, somehow," nor did he more than
sip at the Bordeaux which the presiding officer
ordered served in honor of the occasion. The
mess was rather silent. Most men seemed de
sirous of listening to Barclay when he spoke at
all. They knew every twist and turn of each
other's mode of speech by that time, and could
repeat verbatim every story in the combination.
A TROOPER GALAHAD. gf
Barclay might have something new; but if he did
he had no chance. Captain Follansbee took and
kept the floor from first to last. He was airing
his views on the subject of consolidation, reor
ganization, and purification as practised at the
War Department, a topic which the others con
sidered inexcusable, not so much from the fact
that it must be most unpalatable to Captain Bar
clay, a beneficiary of the business, as it turned
out, as because Follansbee had worn them all out
with it weeks before.
And, to everybody's surprise, so far from seem
ing annoyed or embarrassed or bored, Barclay led
him on from point to point, and, even after coffee
was served, sat an apparently absorbed listener,
for by that time Follansbee had absorbed most of
the claret and was dilating on the matter with
especial reference to the case of Colonel Law
rence. Later that evening Barclay spent an hour
at the Blythes', and two days after he and Bray-
ton dined there.
It was a seven-o'clock dinner. The doctor and
his wife, Major and Mrs. Brooks, Miss Frazier
and Miss Amanda Frazier, were the other guests.
Those were the days when officers of all grades
wore epaulets when in full uniform, but, except
in one or two swell messes, full dress was not con
sidered requisite for either dinner or hops. The
(Jg ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
men wore the uniform frock-coat with shoulder-
straps; some few privileged characters even
dared to appear in a sack-coat with white tie.
Such a thing as the evening dress of civil life was
unknown at a military post, and unowned in the
fighting force of the army, outside, perhaps, of
the artillery. The doctor was a privileged char
acter, a man who said what he thought and did
what he thought right; and when Mrs. Blythe,
glancing out of her parlor window, saw their
favored friend and medical adviser coming along
the walk, his hands deep in his trousers-pockets
and himself in a fit of abstraction and a new sack-
coat, while the partner of his joys and sorrows
chatted briskly with the Frazier girls, Mrs. Blythe
called up-stairs to her massive liege lord, "Wear
your blouse, dear; the doctor has on his'7; where
upon Blythe slipped out of the uniform coat of
formal cut and into the easy sack, and came trot
ting down the creaking stair in time to welcome
his guests. Brooks, Barclay, and BrayEon, who
came later, were in the prescribed regulation
dress, whereat Dr. Collabone exclaimed, " Hullo !
Now that's what I ought to have done, if I'd had
as much regard for conventionality as I have for
health. Gentlemen, do you know you simply
invite an apoplectic seizure by sitting down to
dinner in a tightly buttoned uniform coat? It
A. TROOPER GALAHAD. gg
is barbarous. There ought to be a regulation
against it."
It was observed that while the doctor included
all three of the cavalrymen in his remarks he
looked at and apparently addressed only one,
Captain Barclay, whose uniform coat was brand-
new, very handsomely cut, its buttons and shoul
der-straps of the finest make and finish, whereas
the doctor's were tarnished, if not actually
shabby. Brooks frowned, and Brayton looked
embarrassed lest Barclay should take it amiss; but
that officer remained smilingly interested, and in
nowise troubled. The Frazier girls giggled, and
Miss Amanda was prompt to assert that for her
part she loved to see the officers wear the proper
uniform, and she wasn't alarmed about apoplexy;
whereupon Collabone smiled benignly and said,
"What did I tell you about the danger of tight
lacing?" Amanda couldn't bear the doctor. Her
elder and primmer sister only half liked him.
Many of the women thought him brusque and
rude, but officers and men and mothers of families
swore by him, and children adored him. A child
less man himself, he seemed to keep open house
for the offspring of his comrades. They swarmed
about his quarters at all hours of the day. They
invaded his parlor, overflowed his dining-room,
and ruled his kitchen.
YO ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
A kindly and placid soul was Mrs. Collabone,
a woman who had few cares or perplexities, and
these she promptly turned over to her broad-
minded, broad-shouldered liege for final disposi
tion, as serenely confident of their speedy dissipa
tion as she was of the prompt conquest of any and
all the manifold ills to which childish flesh is
heir by that practitioner's infallible remedies.
Children ran loose in those days in Texas; and
so they ought to, said Collabone. " Savage races
are the only scientific rearers," he maintained.
" Boys or girls, they should be burdened with but
a single garment, or less, from the time they're
born until they're eight or ten, and meantime
they should be made to eat, sleep, and live out
doors." He preached for children regularity in
matters of diet, prescribed four light meals a day,
practised heterodoxy, and distributed bread and
milk, bread and syrup, bread and jam, cookies,
corn dodgers, and molasses candy, morning, noon,
and night. Aunt Purlina, the fat and jocund
goddess of the Collabones' kitchen, had standing
orders on such subjects, and many a time had the
post surgeon to wait for his own refreshments be
cause "the kids" had possession of the premises.
There was never a worry along officers' row when
children strayed from home. "Oh, they're over
at the doctor's," was the soothing response to all
A TROOPER GALAHAD. ^1
queries. The doctor's big yard was the garrison
play-ground; for, when a soulless, heartless, child
less, wifeless post commander, Frazier's prede
cessor, had dared to prohibit the use of the parade-
ground for croquet, hop-scotch, marbles, or " Tom,
Tom Pull-away," it was Collabone who rigged up
swings and giant strides at his own expense and
without the aid of the post quartermaster, and
sent away to New Orleans for croquet sets for the
exclusive use of the youngsters. It nettled in
expressibly the field officer commanding. He
took it as a rebuke from his junior, and took it
out in a course of nagging and persecution at the
doctor's expense, that roused the energies of the
entire post. Frazier was sent from Concho to
supersede the objectionable lieutenant-colonel,
who thereupon declared his intention of moving
the doctor out and taking his quarters; but a
courier galloped all the way from Worth to the
camp at San Patricio, whither the department
commander had gone a-hunting, and another got
back in the nick of time with orders for the de
vastating officer to move to the cantonment on
the Pecos, the worst hole in all Texas, as reported
by the department inspector. The children had
won the day.
At the very moment when the party took their
seats at Blythe's, the children of that establish-
72 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
ment and their friends the Lawrences were hold
ing high carnival at the doctor's, Aunt Purlina
and the colored maid vying with each other in
efforts to stuff them to repletion. Over this up
roarious feast presided the tall slip of a damsel
with whom poor Ned had parted so mournfully
when he went away in February. Ada's was the
only face in all the merry party that seemed to
have known a trace of sorrow. Her big, dark,
mournful eyes and shaggy hair, her sallow face
and shabby frock, twice let down and still
"skimpy," told a pathetic story. Thirteen years
of age, the child had already seen much of anxiety
and trouble, — much, indeed, beyond the ken of
many an elder; and the week going by brought
hour after hour of nervous wear and tear, the
cause of which only one woman knew, and strove
in vain to banish. Ada shrank with actual dread
and repulsion from the thought of having to meet
the man who had come to take her loved father's
place.
Thrice had Barclay spoken to Mrs. Blythe of a
desire to see the children of Colonel Lawrence;
now he felt confident that he knew the cause of
her evasion, and pressed no more. But all through
dinner, even while speaking in the low, somewhat
measured tones habitual to him, he lost no talk
in which the children were mentioned; and at
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 73
Blythe's they were never forgotten. It was not
long before he discovered that the Blythes and
Lawrences — the young people — were at the doc
tor's, Ada presiding. Indeed, with much gusto,
almost as soon as soup was served, Collabone be
gan telling of her matronly, motherly ways. Half
an hour later a messenger came to the door and
asked if Dr. Collabone would please step over and
see Mrs. De Lancy a moment. " Tell her I'll be
there in just one hour/7 said the doctor, looking
at his watch. Then he added, for the benefit of
the party present, " There's nothing in the world
the matter with Mrs. De Lancy, and by that time
she'll have forgotten she sent for me." Ten min
utes later came another call. It was the Colla-
bones' domestic this time. "Little Jimmy's cut
his hand, and Miss Ada can't stop the bleeding."
" Say I'll come instantly," said he, springing from
the table and making his excuses to the lady of
the house.
Barclay's face shone with instant sympathy
and interest. Dessert was nearly over. He
turned to the motherly woman whose own gentle
face betrayed her anxiety.
" Will you think me very rude?" he said.
"You know I do not smoke, and I do want so
much to meet those children. I feel that Ada
purposely shuns me, and this is an opportunity
74 A- TROOPER GALAHAD.
not to be lost. May I be excused? I will soon
return." Mrs. Blythe's eyes were eloquent as she
bade him go.
Three minutes later he softly entered the doc
tor's sitting-room. There in a big easy-chair sat
a tall, sallow-faced, tumbled-haired girl, holding
in her arms a burly little fellow whose frightened
sobbings she had at last controlled, and who, with
only an occasional whimper, was now submitting
to the doctor's examination and deriving much
comfort from his professional and reassuring man
ner.
"Why, this is no cut at all, Jimmy, my boy.
The reason you bled so much is that you are so
uncommonly healthy and full of blood. This
won't keep you out of mischief six hours. Hold
the basin steady, Purlina. Kick all you want to,
Jimmy. Don't you dare to laugh, Kittie Blythe.
Well, if here isn't Captain Barclay, too, come in
to see you! Here is the little wounded soldier,
captain. You had your arm in a sling six long
months, didn't you? The Sioux did that for him,
Jimmy, and you've only got to be done up in a
bandage till to-morrow night. Let Captain Bar
clay hold you? Indeed I won't. He doesn't
.know how to hold little boys — like Ada. He's
got no little boys, nor big Ada either. Bet your
boots he wishes he had, Jimmy." Thus the doc-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. f5
tor chatted as lie bathed and bandaged the pudgy
little fist, while Jimmy lay, half relieved at the
rapid termination to his woes, half resentful they
should be declared so trifling, and, with eyes
much swollen with weeping, critically studied the
new captain's appearance and gave token of modi
fied approval. But Ada's white lids and long
dark lashes were never once uplifted.
Presently Collabone pronounced everything
doing finely, and said he'd go and see Mrs. De
Lancy. " You tell them there's nothing much the
matter, will youf ' he said to Barclay.
"I will — when I get there," was the smiling
reply; "but I'm going to tell this little fellow a
story first about a Sioux baby boy I knew in Wy
oming, and his playmate, a baby bear." And,
with wondering, wide-open eyes upon him, Bar
clay seated himself close to Ada's chair, while the
doctor stole silently away.
Half an hour later, when he returned, a circle
of absorbed listeners was gazing into Barclay's
face. Ada only sat apart, and little Jimmy's
curly head was pillowed on the story-teller's
breast.
CHAPTEK VI.
^ days passed. Barclay had become an in
stitution at Fort Worth, yet opinions were as di
vided and talk of him as constant as before he
came. First and foremost, he had met Mrs.
Winn, and his demeanor on that presumably try
ing occasion had proved a distinct disappointment.
Winn was recovering health, if not spirits. A
stage-load of officers and ladies had come from
the cantonment to spend forty-eight hours, and a
big dance was prescribed for their benefit. Mrs.
Winn danced divinely, and never looked so well
as when with a suitable partner on a suitable
floor. Those were the days when we raved over
the "Mabel," the "Guards," the "Maude," and
the "Hilda" waltzes, Godfrey's melodious crea
tions, — when the galop and trois temps were
going out, and we " Boston dipped" to every tune
from Pat Malloy to Five O'Clock in the Morn
ing, and the Worth orchestra was a good one
when the first violin wasn't drunk, a condition
which had to be provided against with assiduous
care. The party arrived during one of his lucid
76
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 77
intervals, and the adjutant promptly placed the
artist under bonds to shun the cup until after the
guests had gone; then he could fill up to his
heart's content and no fear of a fine. Winn
couldn't attend, but Laura was looking wan and
sallow. She needed air and exercise, and her hus
band urged her to accept Mr. Brayton's escort
and go; so did Collabone; so did her own inclina
tion. Superbly gowned and coiffed and otherwise
decorated, she went, and her entrance was the
sensation of the evening. It was long after ten
when she appeared. The hop was in full blast;
the big room, gayly decorated, was throbbing
with the rhythmic movement of the closing figure
of the Lancers. Almost everybody was on the
floor, for energetic were our dancers in those by
gone days. Just as the music came to full stop,
and with joyous laughter and merry words of
parting the sets broke up, the women and girls,
middle-aged or young (they never grow old in the
army), clinging to their partners' arms, fanning,
possibly, their flushed faces, were escorted to their
seats, and the floor like magic was cleared for the
coming waltz. The group at the flag-draped en
trance parted right and left, making way for a
young officer in cavalry uniform at whom nobody
so much as glanced, because of the tall and ra
diant woman at his side, on whom all eyes were
78 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
centred. "Look at Laura Winn," was the whis
per that flew from womanly lip to lip. " Isn't she
simply superb?" "Look at Mrs. Winn," mut
tered many a man, his eyes lighting at the sight.
"Isn't she just stunning?"
And then people began to hunt for Barclay.
He was standing at the moment talking quietly
with Mrs. Frazier, who was making much of
the young captain now, and was accused of
having hopes of him on account of her eldest
darling, who had dined by his side three different
times at three different houses during the week,
and was therefore said to be " receiving consider
able attention." But the hush of laughter and
miscellaneous chatter almost instantly attracted
the matron's attention. She glanced at the door,
gasped involuntarily, and then as suddenly turned
and narrowly watched him, for he too noted the
lull in conversation, and, slowly facing the door
way, saw before him not ten paces away the
woman who was to have been his wife, gazing
straight at him as though challenging him to look
and be blinded, as blinded by her beauty he had
been before. She was only a young, immature,
untaught girl then, ignorant of her powers. Now
the soft bloom was gone, but in its place there
lurked among the tiny threads of lines or wrinkles
just forming at the corners of her brilliant eyes,
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 79
and in the witching curves about her mobile, sen
sitive, exquisite lips, a charm beside which her
virgin graces were cold and formal. She had
been what all men called a wonderfully pretty
girl. She was now what many women termed a
dangerously beautiful woman, and she knew it
well. When we had no one especially selected to
" receive' ' in those days, it was a sort of garrison
custom for everybody to present himself or her
self to the wife of the commanding officer, in case
that official was so provided. Mrs. Frazier was
seated in plain view of the queenly creature who,
having advanced a few steps beyond the portals
and the loiterers there assembled, now halted, and
like some finished actress swept the room with her
radiant eyes, as though compelling all men, all
women, to yield to her their attention and regard,
and then, smiling brightly, beamingly (dutiful
Brayton guided by the pressure of her daintily
gloved hand), moved with almost royal grace and
deliberation to where Mrs. Frazier sat in state;
and the first lady of the garrison rose to greet her.
Unsuitable as is the full uniform for cavalry
purposes to-day, it was worse in 1870, when our
shoulders were decked with wabbly epaulets and
our waists were draped with a silken sash that few
men wore properly. But whatever might be said
of Sir Galahad's shortcomings as a boon com-
80 4 TROOPER GALAHAD.
panion, or of his severely simple and economical
mode of life, there was no manifestation of parsi
mony in his attire. No man in the room was so
well uniformed, or wore the garb of his profession
with better grace. He who came in a flannel
shirt and a rough gray suit, with a silver watch
and leather watch-chain, appeared this night in
uniform of faultless cut and fit, with brand-new
glittering captain's epaulets, while his sash was of
the costliest silk net, of a brighter red than gen
erally worn, — most officers appearing in a stringy
affair that age and weather had turned to dingy
purple. On his left breast Barclay wore the
badge in gold and enamel of a famous fighting
division in a gallant corps; and such badges were
rare in the days whereof I write. Moreover,
though neither a tall man nor a stalwart, Captain
Barclay was erect, wiry, and well proportioned,
and his head and face were well worth the second
look every one had been giving this night. " The
Twelfth have been swearing like pirates at having
another doughboy saddled on 'em," chuckled Cap
tain Perkins, himself a doughboy. "Begad, the
Twelfth has no better picture of the officer and
the gentleman than this importation from the
Foot." But no one spoke with the thought of
being heard as Laura Winn finished her greeting
to Mrs. Frazier. Every man and woman was in-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 81
tent only on what was coming next, although
many strove to speak, or to appear to listen, to
their neighbors. Charlotte Frazier actually rose
from her seat and stepped out into the room that
she might have a better view.
And Barclay would not have been the obser
vant man he had already shown himself to be had
he not known it. His color was a bit high for one
whose face was ordinarily so pale, but he stood
calmly erect, with an expression of pleased con
templation in his fine eyes; waiting for Mrs. Winn
to finish the somewhat hurried yet lavish words
that she addressed to Mrs. Frazier; then she
turned effusively upon him.
"Captain Barclay!" she exclaimed. "How
very good to see you here! and how glad we all
are to welcome you to the Twelfth! Mr. Winn
and I have been in despair because his illness has
kept him a prisoner. Indeed, I doubt if I should
have left him at all to-night but for his positive
orders — and the doctor's; then, of course, I much
wanted to see you — too."
She had begun confidently, even masterfully.
She looked him with determined effort straight in
the face at the start, but her confidence flitted
before a dozen words were said. Her voice
faltered before she had half finished, for Barclay's
eyes frankly, even smilingly, met hers, and with
6
g2 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
ease and dignity and courteous interest all com
mingled he had bowed slightly over her hand,
lowered it after a brief, by no means lingering,
pressure, and stood, merely mentioning her name,
"Mrs. Winn," and, as was rather a way of his,
letting the other party do all the talking. It was
a godsend to Laura Winn that the waltz music
began at the next instant, for his nonchalance was
something utterly unexpected. Oh, how dared
he look so calmly, indifferently, forgetfully, al
most unrecognizingly, into her eyes, and stand
there so placidly, when her heart was flutter
ing wildly with nervous excitement, her words
coming in gasps !
"Oh, Mr. Brayton, how heavenly!" she ex
claimed. "Don't let us lose an instant of that
waltz." Over his glittering shoulder she beamed
in parting a bewitching smile, levelled all at Bar
clay, and glided away, a floating cloud of filmy
drapery, a vision of flashing eyes, of flushing
cheeks, of dazzling white teeth gleaming between
the parted rose-leaves of her mouth, of snowy
shoulders and shapely arms, of peeping, pointed,
satin-shod feet, the handsomest creature in all
that crowded room, and the most dismally un
happy. She had met him in the witnessing pres
ence of all Fort Worth, and all the garrison saw
that she had sustained a crushing defeat. She
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 83
who was to have been his wife and had duped
him, she who had looked to subjugate him once
more, was duped in turn, the victim of her own
vanity.
"And to think," said Mrs. De Lancy, "she
only changed her half-mourning a month ago,
and now — in full ball costume!"
Fort Worth didn't stop talking of that episode
for all of another week, and that, too, in the face
of other interesting matter.
To begin with, Sergeant Marsden had disap
peared as though from the face of the earth.
Whither he had fled no man could say. No set
tlement worth the name had not been searched,
no ranch remained unvisited. Fuller's people
would not shield the fugitive, for Fuller, as the
post sutler, suffered equally with Uncle Sam from
the sergeant's depredations. Settlers and ranch
people who bought of the latter cut into the busi
ness of the former, and Fuller would most gladly
have had him "rounded up" long weeks ago; but
Marsden and his few confederates in the garrison
had admirably covered their tracks, and the indi
cations of declining trade that had roused the sut
ler's suspicions led to no arousal of vigilance
within the sentry line: wherefore Fuller's heart
was hardened against the post commander and the
erstwhile commissary, and this, too, at a time
g4 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
when the latter stood in sorest need of financial
help. The extent of poor Winn's losses and re
sponsibility was now known : so far as his commis
sary accounts were concerned, not a cent less than
three thousand dollars would cover them. The
quartermaster was out a horse and equipments,
and several confiding enlisted men and laun
dresses were defrauded of money loaned the dash
ing sergeant. Uncle Sam, be it known, has sum
mary methods as a bill-collector. He simply stops
his servant's pay until the amount due is fully
met. Winn's total pay and emoluments as com
puted in '70 and ?71 would barely serve in two
years to square himself with his exacting Uncle.
Meantime, what were wife and baby and other
claimants to do? What was he to live on, and
so insure payment of which his death would de
stroy all possibility? Crushed as Winn was, there
were men and women who roundly scored his
wife for appearing superbly dressed at the first
ball graced by the presence of her discarded
lover. Yet had she stayed away, their disappoint
ment would have exceeded this disapprobation.
Collabone said his patient suffered from a low
fever, which the unprofessional found difficult to
understand, in view of Mrs. Winn's diagnosis,
which declared it alarmingly high. Certain it is
that he kept his room until four days after the
A TROOPER GALAHAD. §5
evening of the ball; then he had to turn out and
face the music, for orders came from " San An-
tone."
Then, too, came another invoice of interesting
matter to Fort Worth, and it must be remem
bered that, in the narrow and restricted life of the
far frontier, interest existed in matters that seem
too trivial for mention in the broader spheres of
the metropolis. The invoice was an actual and
material fact, and consisted of a big wagon-load
of household goods consigned to Captain Barclay,
accompanied by a dignified Ethiopian and two
very knowing-looking horses that had many of
the points of thoroughbreds. The quartermaster's
train under proper escort had made the long pull
from Department Head-Quarters, and all unan
nounced came these chattels to the new troop
leader. The very next morning, which was a
Sunday, when Brooks's four troops formed line
for inspection in the old-fashioned full dress of
the cavalry, the men in shell jackets and plumed
felt hats, the officers in long-skirted, clerical-look
ing frock-coats, black ostrich plumes, gold epau
lets, and crimson sashes, there rode at the head of
Lawrence's old troop a new captain, whose horse
and equipments became the centre of critical and
admiring eyes the moment it was possible for his
comrades to leave their commands and gather
86 & TROOPER GALAHAD.
about him. Very few officers in those days pos
sessed anything better than the regulation troop
bridle and raw-hide McClellan saddle, which with
their folded blankets satisfied all the modest re
quirements of the frontier. The light-battery-
men indulged in a little more style and had
picturesque red blankets to help out, but even
they were put in the shade, and came trotting
over during the rest after Brooks had made the
formal ride round to look at the general appear
ance of his command. All hands seemed to
gather in approbation about Barclay's charger.
The horse himself was a bright, blooded bay, with
jet-black, waving mane, tail, and forelock, superb
head, shoulders and haunches, and nimble legs,
all handsomely set off by a glistening bridle with
double rein, martingale, glossy breast-strap and
polished bits, curb-chain, bosses, rings, and heart,
with the regimental number in silver on the
bosses and at the corner of the handsome shab-
raque of dark blue cloth, patent leather, and the
yellow edging and trimming of the cavalry.
"The only outfit of the kind at Worth/' said
Brooks, emphatically. "And yet, gentlemen," he
continued, seeing latent criticism in the eyes of
certain of the circle, " it's all strictly in accordance
with regulations, and just as we used to have it
in the old days before the war. I wish we all had
A TROOPER GALAHAD. g?
the same now. I haven't seen a Grimsley outfit
since '61."
"Grimsley it is/' said the veteran captain of
the light battery. "Mine went to Kichmond in
'61 with what we didn't save of our battery at
First Bull Eun."
" Grimsley it is," said his junior subaltern. " If
Sam Waring could only see that, he'd turn green
with envy to-day and borrow it to-morrow."
Whereat there went up a laugh, for Waring was
a man of mark in the queer old days of the army.
Then of course every one wanted to know, as
the cavalcade rode from the drill-ground up to
the post, where Barclay had bought his horses,
and some inquired how much tney cost; and to
all queries of the kind Barclay answered, with
perfect good humor, that he had ordered the
equipments of the old firm of Grimsley, still
doing business in St. Louis, as it did in the days
when Jefferson Barracks and Leavenworth and
Kiley were famous cavalry stations in the '50s;
the horses he had bought of a family connection
in Kentucky, and had given seven hundred dol
lars for the pair.
"See here, Hodge," growled the old stagers as
they clustered about the club-room, sipping cool
ing drinks after the warm morning exercise,
" what's all this you've been telling us about Bar-
88 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
clay's inexpensive, economical, and skimpy ways?
He's got the outfit of a British field-marshal, by
gad!"
But Hodge was too much concerned and con
founded to speak. "It's more'n I can explain,"
he said. "Why, he wouldn't spend ten cents in
"Wyoming."
And yet, had Hodge only known it, Barclay's
infantry outfit was of just as fine finish and ma
terial, as far as it went, as these much more costly
and elaborate appointments of the mounted ser
vice. Everything connected with the dress or
equipments of his profession Barclay, who would
spend nothing for frivolities, ordered of the best
furnishers, and no man ever appeared on duty in
uniform more precise or equipments of better
make.
Of course the club-room was not the only place
where Barclay's really bewildering appearance
was discussed. Among the officers there were
many who growled and criticised. It was all
right to have handsome horses, if he could afford
it: any cavalryman would try to do that, was the
verdict. "But all these other jimcracks, they're
simply moonshine!" And yet, as pointed out by
Major Brooks, it was all strictly according to
regulation. "Damn the regulations!" said Cap
tain Follansbee; "they're too expensive for me."
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 89
And, take it all in all, the feeling of the mess was
rather against than with Barclay; he had no busi
ness wearing better clothes or using better horse-
furniture than did his fellows. Follansbee went
so far as to tackle Ely the on the subject and in
voke his sympathy, but that massive old dragoon
disappointed him. "Barclay's right," said he;
" and if the rules were enforced we'd all have to
get them."
" But they cost so much," said Follansbee.
"Not half what you spend in whiskey in half
the time it would take to get them here," was the
unfeeling rejoinder.
Mrs. Frazier and Mrs. De Lancy, however,
wished the captain had brought an easy open car
riage with driving horses instead of saddlers. It
would have been far more useful, said those level
headed women. And so it might have been — to
them.
But in the midst of all the talk and discussion
came tidings that amazed Fort Worth. Ned
Lawrence was actually on his way back to Texas,
— would be with his precious babies within the
fortnight, — would reoccupy his old quarters for
a while at least as the guest of the usurper, for
they had been formally chosen by Captain Bar
clay, to the frantic wrath of Ada when first she
heard the news, — wrath that sobbed itself out in
90 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
the lap of her loving friend Mrs. Blythe, as the
motherless girl listened with astonished ears to
the explanation.
"So far from raging at him, Ada, you should
be thankful that your dear father and you and
Jimmy have found so thoughtful and generous a
friend as Captain Barclay. If he had not chosen
your house, Captain Bronson would have done so,
and you would have had to go. As it is, nothing
of yours or your father's will be disturbed."
And sorely tempted was the enthusiastic, ten
der-hearted woman to tell much more that, but
for his prohibition, she would have told; and yet
she did not begin to know all.
CHAPTEK VII.
WITHIN the fortnight came poor !N"ed Lawrence
back to Worth, and men who rode far out on the
Crockett trail to meet the stage marvelled at the
change three months had made in him. He had
grown ten years older, and was wrinkled and gray.
.Winn was of the party, and Winn, who a month
gone by was looking haggard, nervous, miserable,
now rode buoyantly, with almost hopeful eyes
and certainly better color than he had had for
months, despite the fact that he had lost both
flesh and color during his illness. Something had
happened to lighten his load of dread and care.
Something must have happened to enable Law
rence to take that long, long journey back to
Texas. Fort Worth indulged in all manner of
theories as to where the money was coming from,
and Barclay, of course, was suspected, even inter
rogated. The frankest man in some respects that
ever lived, Captain Galbraith Barclay was reti
cent as a clam when he saw fit to keep silent, and
men found it useless to question or women to hint.
As for Winn, he had but one classmate at the
post, Brayton, who had never been one of his in-
91
92 ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
timates at the Point, and, being rather, as was
said, of the " high and mighty/' reserved and dis
tant sort with the subalterns he found at Worth
on joining three winters before, Winn had never
been popular. Lawrence was his one intimate,
despite the disparity in years. And so no man
ventured to ask by what means he expected to
meet the demands thus made upon him. The
board of survey ordered to determine the amount
of the loss and fix the responsibility had no alter
native. Winn and his few friends made a hard
fight, setting forth the facts that the count had
been made every month as required by orders and
regulations, and that except by bursting open
every bale, box, and barrel, and sifting over the
contents, it would have been impossible to detect
Marsden's methods. On some things the board
was disposed to dare regulations and raps on the
knuckles, and to let Winn off on several others;
but what was the use? "the proceedings would
only be sent back for reconsideration," said their
president; and as it transpired that Winn had
not exercised due vigilance, but had trusted
almost entirely to his sergeant, they decided to
cut the Gordian knot by saddling the young offi
cer with the entire responsibility, which meant,
sooner or later, a stoppage of nearly three thou
sand dollars of his pay.
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 93
It is a sad yet time-honored commentary at the
expense of human nature that the contemplation
of the misfortunes of our fellow-men is not always
a source of unalloyed sorrow. There was genuine
and general sympathy for Lawrence, because he
had been poor and pinched and humbled for
years, had worn shabby clothes, and had sought
all possible field duty, where "deeds, not duds/'
as a garrison wit expressed it, seemed to make the
man. He had frankly spoken of his straits and
worries to such as spoke to him in friendship, and
this, with his deep and tender love for his chil
dren, and his capital record as a scout leader, had
won over to him all the men who at one time were
envious and jealous and had cherished the lines
man's prejudice against the fellow whose duties
for years had kept him on the staff. The women
were all with him, and that meant far more than
may seem possible outside the army. There was
many a gentle dame in the old days of adobe
barracks who could be an Artemisia in the cause
of a friend.
~No one knew just what object Ned Lawrence
had in coming back to Dixie. Every one knew he
had indignantly refused the second lieutenancy,
despite the fact that one or two men with war
service and rank almost equal to his own had
meekly accepted the grudgingly tendered com-
94 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
mission, and others were said to be about to fol
low suit, — all, presumably, with the hope that
their friends and representatives in Congress as
sembled would speedily legislate them back where
they thought they belonged. No one knew where
Ned Lawrence had made a raise of money, but
raise he certainly had made, for, to Blythe's in
dignation, there came a draft of one hundred dol
lars to cover the expenses, he said, of his children
and old Mammy and to pay the latter some of
her wages. The balance he would settle, he
wrote, when he arrived. Blythe would far rather
he had waited until his accounts were adjusted;
then, if Lawrence were in funds, Blythe could
have found no fault with this insistence on at
least partially defraying the expenses incurred in
providing for the little household. Lawrence
hoped to have his accounts adjusted, his letter
said, and he had reason to believe, from what
friends in Washington told him, that he would
find his successor willing to receipt to him for
missing items, trusting to luck and the flotsam
and jetsam of the frontier to replace them in
course of time. Lawrence, indeed, was curious
now to meet and know Captain Barclay, for he
had been told many things that had gone far to
remove the feeling of unreasoning antagonism he
had felt at first.
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 95
Only one thing did he say to Ely the that threw
light on his future plans. "I am dreadfully
sorry," he wrote, "to hear such ill tidings about
Harry Winn. I was always fearful there was
something wrong about that fellow Marsden, and
sometimes strove to caution him, — I, who could
not see the beam in my own eye, — I, with two
scoundrels in my orderly-room, trying to warn
him against the one in his! Winn is a proud,
sensitive, self-centred sort of fellow, whom wealth
perhaps might have made popular. He is no bet
ter manager than I. He has a wife who could
never help him to live within his means, as poor
Kitty certainly tried to do with me." (Oh2 the
blessed touch of Time! Oh, the sweet absolution
of Death! Kitty was an angel now, and her ways
and means were buried with all that was mortal
of her.) "And, worse than all, poor Hal has no
one, I fear, to help him now, as — I write it with
blinded eyes, dear Blythe — it has pleased God I
should find in many friends in the days of my
sore adversity, — you and your blessed wife, and
the colonel, and Brooks, — even rough old Fol-
lansbee and our dilettante De Lancy, and that in
imitable Collabone. My heart overflows, and my
eyes, too, at thought of all you and they have
done and said and written for me and mine. And
here, too, where in my bitterness I thought I was
96 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
deserted of all, here is gallant old Front de Boeuf
(you remember how we swore by him in the Val
ley after Davy Russell was killed). He has
housed and fed and nursed and cared for me like
a brother, and Senator Howe and even old Catnip
—God bless him! — have worked hard for me;
and, though my soldier days seem over for the
time at least, my stubborn spirit has had to sur
render to such counsellors and friends as they
have been to me. They all say Congress will
surely put me back next winter, and meantime
'Buffstick' says I'm to have a salaried position in
a big company with which he is associated, and to
begin work as soon as my health is re-established
and my accounts straightened out."
"Who is Buffstick?" queried Mrs. Blythe, at
this juncture.
"Buffstick? Oh, that was our pet name for
Colonel Dalton, of the — th Massachusetts, Law
rence's friend and host in Washington; a mag
nificent fellow, dear, with a head and chest that
made some lover of Scott liken him to Front de
Boeuf, — out of i Ivanhoe,' you know. But he was
a stickler for neatness in dress and equipments,
and his regiment called him Buffstick, and grew
to love him all the same. He commanded a bri
gade after Cedar Creek, and now, — just think of
it! — he's a capitalist."
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 97
"Does lie know Captain Barclay, do you
think?'7 she asked, after a reflective pause.
"I'm sure I don't know. Probably not," was
the answer. " They never served in the same part
of the army. Why do you ask?"
" Oh, I was wishing — I couldn't help thinking
— how much Mr. Winn needed some good friend,
too."
" Winn and Lawrence are very different men,"
said Blythe, gravely. "Lawrence { has made
friends, while poor Winn has only enemies, I
fear, and, really, none worse than himself."
Mrs. Blythe sighed as she turned away. It was
much as her husband said. The Winns had come
to the regiment after a round of receptions, din
ners, and dances in their honor all the way from
Washington to Worth, and had "started with a
splurge," as the chroniclers declared. Laura's
gowns and airs and graces won her no end of
prominence, but very few friends. Winn's
" high and mighty" ways, so they were termed by
all the garrison, in which at that time only two
or three West Pointers could be found, had alien
ated all the subs, most of the seniors, and many
of the women. Their extravagance during the
first year of service, the explanations and excuses
tendered by Laura in the next, and Harry's in
creasing moodiness and distraction, served only
7
98 ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
to widen the breach. Men and women both, who
began by envying, turned to openly decrying.
Cutting things were said to Laura, whose men
dacities provoked them. Sneering or at least sug
gestive things were often said in presence of
Winn, if not exactly to him; for there was one
quality about the swell the garrison had to re
spect, — his cheerful and entire readiness to fight
on very small provocation, and those were the
days when the tenets of the "code" were not
totally forgotten, and there still remained in the
army a sentiment in favor of the doctrine of per
sonal responsibility for disparaging words. There
would be fewer courts-martial to-day were there
more of it left. But when women heard the
stories about the big bill at the sutler's and others
that came by mail, and made little icy comments
about some people being able to afford much more
than they could, Laura laughed off the allusions
to their superior style of living by stories of an
indulgent papa, until papa's death left her with
out further resource from that quarter. Then she
set afloat a fabrication about a doting aunt of
Harry's who had no children of her own, — an
amiable old widow who was to leave him all her
money. He did have an aunt of that description,
but she didn't have the money, and there were
men who were malicious enough to refer in
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 99
Winn's presence to their wish that they had
wealthy fathers-in-law or doting dowager aunts,
thereby giving some other fellow a chance to say,
" And so does Fuller, no doubt."
Indeed, so practically friendless were the
Winns that among nine out of ten families along
officers' row there was a feeling of lively curiosity
to note the effect of this supposably crushing blow
on the unhappy pair, and a consequent sentiment,
only partially veiled in many cases, of keen dis
appointment when the news flew around the gar
rison that Mr. Winn had announced his readiness
to meet the demand in full.
"Why, it can't be true," said many a woman.
" I'll believe it when I see the money," said many
a man. "Do you suppose — he could have ac
cepted it from — Captain Barclay?" asked, in
strictest confidence, Mrs. De Lancy of Laura's
erstwhile intimate, Mrs. Faulkner.
"Not Harry Winn, probably," answered Mrs.
Faulkner, in confidence equally inviolable, "but
and the pause that followed was sugges
tive. Follansbee and Bellows bolted down to the
sutler's with the surprising news, wondering if
Fuller could have been ass enough to advance
the money. There was a time when he would
have done so, perhaps, for he was one of the first
to be enthralled by young Mrs. Winn's grace and
A. TROOPER GALAHAD.
beauty, and lavished presents upon her — and
upon Winn, of course — for a month, until Winn
put a stop to the presents and Mrs. Fuller came
post-haste back from San Antonio and put a stop
to other manifestations. But Fuller had long
since become estranged from the Winns, — the
presentation of his bill at inopportune times
having later widened the apparent breach. His
jaw fell and his mouth opened wide when he
heard the news, for Fuller had begun to believe
that he would never get his money, and resented
it that Uncle Sam should be luckier.
"Send up another 'bill rendered' by Ikey to
Mr. Winn this afternoon/' he bade his clerk, as
the investigators departed to follow other clues.
Fuller had gone down into his pockets, unbe
known to the post, and had actually pressed on
Lawrence a loan of three hundred dollars, and
bade him come for more wThen that was gone, but
not a cent would he put up for Harry Winn,—
not he; "the damned supercilious snob," was
what Fuller now called him, not so much because
he thought him a snob or supercilious or even de
serving of damnation, as because he had allowed
himself to be robbed of three thousand dollars'
worth of goods that might otherwise have been
purchased of him, Fuller, for double or treble the
money. No, plainly, Fuller was not the angel
A TROOPER GALAHAD. }()1
that had come to the rescue'*o4 Winn, not could
Follansbee or Bellows 02 \tiae V^'t'C'f; ;^6 jf eUows
find out who had. l^he mystery of Gilgal was
outdone. Even Frazier and Brooks did not know,
and when some one, possibly Mrs. Frazier, sug
gested to the colonel that as the commanding offi
cer he really ought to know, the colonel did send
for his new quartermaster and say to him, "Mr.
Trott, as you are to receipt to Mr. Winn for the
money value of his shortage, it would be well to
be very circumspect. He probably cannot have
that much in currency here. How does he pro
pose to pay it?"
"I don't know, sir," said the man of business,
promptly. " He says he will be ready to cover the
entire amount on or before the 20th of May. I
didn't like to ask him where it was to come from."
Neither did Frazier, despite no little prodding
at home. Only one man ventured to speak of it
to "Winn, and, the resultant conversation having
been variously and exaggeratively reported, the
truth should here be told. It was at the club-
room, which, for the first time in weeks, Mr.
Winn entered. He asked for Major Brooks, and,
finding him absent, turned to go out with no
more than a nod to the party at the poker-table.
That party was made up mainly of the class that
was numerous in the army in those days and is
102 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
as rare as an Indian fight now. The least re-
sppiaslBje among. tfheui. at the moment was Lieu
tenant Bralligan, ex-corporal of dragoons, wno
could no more have passed the examination ex
acted of candidates to-day than a cat could squeeze
through a carbine. "Hwat d'ye warrnt of the
meejor, Winn?" he shouted. "Sure ye've got
permission to ride out wid us to meet Lawrence."
Winn vouchsafed no answer. Bralligan and
he were things apart, a reproach to each other's
eyes, and the evil blood in the Irishman, inflamed
already by whiskey, boiled over at the slight.
"It's Barclay ye're looking for, not Brooks!" he
shouted, in tempestuous wrath. "Faith, if ye
want anything out o? the Quaker, let yer wife do
the—
Instantly a brawny hand, that of Captain Fol-
lansbee, was sprawled over the broad, leering
mouth. Instantly there was a crash of chair-legs
hastily moved, of grinding boot-heels as men
sprang to their feet, of poker-chips flying to the
floor, — a sound of oaths and furious struggles, for
two of the party, with the attendant, had hurled
themselves on the half-drunken lieutenant and
were throttling him to silence, while Captains
Bronson and Fellows sprang to head off Winn,
who with blazing eyes and clinched fists came
bounding back into the room.
A TROOPER GALAHAD. }()3
"What did that blackguard say?" he de
manded. "I did not catch the words."
" Nothing, nothing, Winn, that you should no
tice," implored Bronson. "He's drunk. He
doesn't know what he is saying. He's crazed.
No, sir," insisted Bronson, sternly, as Winn strove
to pass him. "If you do not instantly withdraw
I shall place you under arrest. Be sure that this
poor devil shall make all reparation when he's
sober enough to realize what has happened. Go
at once. — You go with him, Fellows."
And so between them they got Winn away,
and others soused Bralligan with acequia water
and locked him up in his room and hacl him
solemnly sober by afternoon stables, while, vastly
to their relief, Winn arith two or three cavaliers
rode away at three o'clock to meet Ned Lawrence
somewhere afar out on the Crockett trail.
Greatly did Follansbee and Fellows congratulate
Bronson, and Bronson them, on the fact that they
had happened to be looking on at the game when
Winn happened in and Bralligan broke out; for
thereby they had stopped what might have been
a most tremendous row. "All of which mustn't
be known to a soul," said they.
But Bralligan's voice was big and deep. It was
one of the causes of his unhallowed preferment in
the days when second lieutenancies were showered
104 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
on the rank and file the first year of the war.
Bralligan's taunting words, only partially audible
to Winn as he issued from the front of the build
ing, were distinctly heard by domestics lying in
wait for a chance to borrow of the steward and
pick up gossip at the back. By stables that even
ing the story was being told high and low all
over the post; even the children heard with eager
yet uncomprehending ears; and so it happened
that just as the drums of the infantry were sound
ing first call for retreat parade, and the women
folk were beginning to muster on the porches, and
the warriors of the Foot along the opposite side
at the barracks, and as Captain Barclay, a light
rattan stick in his hand, came strolling back from
stables, Lieutenant Brayton at his side, little Jim
Lawrence made a dash from a group of children,
and, in the full hearing of several officers and
half a dozen women, a shrill, eager, childish voice
piped out the fatal words, —
"Uncle Gal— Uncle Gal— what did Mr. Bwal-
ligan mean by telling Mr. Winn to send his wife
to you for money?"
Laura Winn herself was on the nearest piazza
at the moment, stunningly handsome, and posing
for a bow from her next-door neighbors as they
came by. She and every other woman there dis
tinctly heard the words and marked the effect.
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 1Q5
Sir Galahad's face flushed crimson. He caught
his little friend up in his arms and held him close
to his burning cheek. "Hush, Jimmy boy. He
meant nothing, and soldiers never repeat such
nonsense. Kun to sister Ada and help her get
everything ready for papa's coming. Think,
Jimmy, he'll be here by tattoo." And with a
parting hug he set the youngster down at his door
step and started him on his way. Then, courteously
raising his cap to the gathering on the nearest
porch, and noting, as did they, that Mrs. Winn
had disappeared within her hall, Barclay quickly
entered his own portal, and nabbed Brayton as
he was making a palpable "sneak" for the rear
door. The youngster found escape impossible.
Will he, nill he, the boy told the story as it had
been told to him, Barclay standing looking
straight into his eyes, as though reading his very
soul, yet never saying a word beyond the original,
" You heard what Jimmy said. It is another in
stance of 'out of the mouths of babes and suck
lings,' Brayton. Now, tell me exactly what you
know."
It was a warm May evening. A hot south-
wester had been blowing from the broad valley of
the Rio Bravo, and the few men in the club-room
at nine o'clock were demanding cooling drinks.
Bralligan was there, looking somewhat solemn
106 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
and sheepish. He knew that nothing but the
presence of senior officers had prevented a serious
fracas as the result of his asinine bray that morn
ing, but, now that Winn was out of the way and
the matter in the hands of his captain, he had no
dread of the thrashing he deserved, and was dis
posed to an exhibition of bravado. A drink or
two added to his truculence, as well as to his de
sire to resume the game interrupted that morning.
There were always in those days a few reliable
gamblers at the big frontier posts, and presently
Bralligan, in his shirt-sleeves, was contemplating
a sizable pile of chips and bantering a burly cap
tain to " see his raise," when suddenly he became
aware of a distracted look in the eyes of the
group about the table, and, glancing towards the
door, his own blood-shot orbs lighted upon the
trim figure of Captain Barclay, standing calmly
surveying the party, — Barclay, who never
smoked, drank, or played cards, and who was re
ported to have started a movement for prayer-
meetings among the enlisted men. His very pres
ence in that atmosphere was ominous, especially
as the gaze of his usually soft brown eyes was
fixed on Bralligan. One or two men said, " Good-
evening, captain," in an embarrassed way, but
the Irish subaltern only stared, the half-grin on
his freckled face giving place to an uneasy leer.
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
On a bench to the left of the entrance stood a
huge water-cooler, with gourds and glasses by its
side. Underneath the spigot was a big wooden
pail, two-thirds full of drippings and rinsings.
Without a word, the new-comer stepped quietly
within the room, picked up the bucket, and,
striding straight to the table before Bralligan
could spring to his feet, deftly inverted the vessel
over the Irishman's astonished head, deluging
him with discarded water and smashing the rim
well down on his unprotected shoulders. An in
stant more, and Bralligan sent the bucket whirl
ing at his assailant's head, which it missed by a
yard, then, all dripping as he was, followed it in
a furious charge. Sir Galahad "side-clipped"
with the ease and nonchalance of long but un
suspected practice, and let fly a white fist which
found lodgement with stunning crash straight
under the Irishman's ear, felling him like an ox.
CHAPTEK VIII.
AND so Ned Lawrence got back to Worth to
find it far livelier than when he left it. The
stage with its joyous escort had come trundling
in just before tattoo, and first and foremost the
returning wanderer was driven to his own door
way and left for half an hour with Ada and
Jimmy — the one sobbing with joy, the other
laughing with delight — on the father's knees.
Then Mrs. Blythe stole in to bid them to the
waiting supper, and, pending Lawrence's reap
pearance somewhere along the line, the officers
gathered in low-voiced groups discussing the
startling event of the evening. Bralligan, raging
for the blood of the double-dashed, triple-ad jec-
tived hound who had assaulted him, had been
lugged home by two or three of his kind, con
soled by Captain Mullane with the assurance that
he'd see that the preacher gave him full satisfac
tion in the morning, for, with native love of a
ruction, Mullane stood ready to bear the sub
altern's challenge, even though his better nature
told him the ducking was richly deserved: with
Irish honor in question, Mullane was for fight.
108
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
Frazier and Brooks, of course, said the seniors
present, must not be allowed official knowledge
of what had taken place, though in those be
nighted days of magnificent distances from the
centre of civilization and the exploring grounds
of reporters of the press, many a stirring row was
settled without its ever being heard of beyond the
limits of the garrison in which it occurred. Cap
tain Barclay, contenting himself with the one
blow, despite an unchristian impulse to follow it
up with a kick at the sprawling figure, had stood
calmly by when Bralligan's associates lifted him,
half stunned, to his feet, then, addressing himself
to Mullane, with just the least tremor in his voice
and twitching to his muscles, remarked, "Of
course you know what led to this, sir. If your
lieutenant desires to follow it up, you can find
me at my quarters." Then, looking very de
liberately around upon the little circle of flushed
or pallid faces, — there were only five officers
present, — he slowly turned, walked away, and
shut himself in his room.
A light was still burning there when Brayton
tiptoed in at half-past ten. He, with several
other cavalrymen, had been sitting in the major's
parlor, listening to Lawrence's tale of Els expe
riences in Washington. "Winn had rejoined the
party late, and one glance at his face was enough
HO 4 TROOPER GALAHAD.
to tell Brayton that somewhere he had heard of
the fracas at the club-room. Brayton's boyish
heart was bubbling over with pride and delight in
this new and unlooked-for side to his captain.
Every day of his service with that officer only
served to strengthen the regard and admiration
Brayton felt for him. Barclay had made no pre
tence of being a cavalryman on the strength of
his assignment to that arm. He started with tfie
assertion that he had everything to learn, and
then surprised his subaltern by an extensive
knowledge of what we then called "the tactics."
He was certainly not as much at home in saddle
as on foot, and did not pretend to be, but he was
by no means a poor or ungraceful rider. He had
a light, gentle hand, at least, — a thing much
harder for most men to acquire than a good seat.
He was very cool, just, and level-headed with the
members of the troop, not a few of whom thought
to "run it" on the "doughboy" captain; but all
such projects had flattened out within the fort
night after his coming. Barclay might not know
horses, but he did know men, and the first ser
geant was the first to find it out, — the new cap
tain calmly and almost confidentially pointing
out to him, after ten days of apparently casual
glancings over the mess-room and kitchen, that
the men were not getting their proper allowance
3. TROOPER GALAHAD.
of coffee, and that the savings made on the rations
did not all go where they belonged.
"Boy an' man, sorr," began Sergeant Sullivan,
oratorically and with fine indignation, "I've
sarved in the dragoons or cavalry the best fifteen
years of me life, and this is the furrst time me
honor's been called into account. I shall tindher
me resignation at wanst."
"I have had its acceptance in contemplation
for some days, sergeant," was the calm response.
" But first we'll overhaul the accounts."
"Currnel Larns's, sorr, would niver have
treated an ould soldier in this way."
" That, I fear, is true," was the imperturbable
response, " and as a consequence the colonel ap
pears to have been robbed right and left, — your
own name being brought into question. That will
answer for the present, sergeant."
And when the troop heard that Denny Sulli
van had been "broke" and was to be tried by
court-martial for thieving, great was the comment
excited, and the men began to wonder what man
ner of doughboy was this, after all, that had come
to them, — the doughboy that ould Denny had so
confidently counted on running to suit himself.
But this didn't begin to be all. A very acute
trailer was Galahad. Those were days in which
only a subaltern, and not always even a subaltern,
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
was expected to appear at morning stables; but
the new captain liked to rise early, he said. He
was up with the sun or earlier, and hoof- or wheel-
tracks about the stables before the herd was led
forth to water never escaped his attention, yet
apparently never excited remark. Within the
third week, however, another non-commissioned
officer was suddenly nabbed, and so was a wagon-
load of forage, going off to a neighboring ranch
at four o'clock in the morning. Meantime the
men noted that their coffee and rations were bet
ter and more bountiful, and soldiers are quick to
receive impressions that come by way of the
stomach. "The new captain is knocking out the
old abuses," said they, and it was wonderful how
soon the ex-doughboy made his way into their
good graces. There had been some disposition on
the part of the wits in other companies to refer
to Barclay's men as " The Parson's Own" when it
was announced that the captain had attended the
chaplain's evening service, but even that was be
ginning to die out, when all of a sudden it was
noised abroad this evening that the redoubtable
Bralligan had been felled by a single blow of that
Quaker fist.
Brayton was fairly quivering with excitement
this night of nights, and could not sleep. He
longed to see his captain and hear his version of
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
the affair, but the door was tightly closed instead
of being invitingly open, and he dared not in
trude. Not one word had been said about the
matter at the major's, but Brayton knew it would
soon be known even to the officer in command.
So long, however, as it was not reported to him
officially, Frazier would probably let the affair
take its course. Bralligan deserved the knock
down, and doubtless would be glad enough to let
the matter end there. But, thought Brayton, if
he should demand satisfaction, and Barclay's re
ligious or conscientious scruples were to prevent
his acceptance, " then comes my chance," for the
youngster himself proposed to take it up. He
had no scruples. He had been longing for a
chance to kick that cad Bralligan for over a year,
and after all it was Barclay that got it.
Eleven o'clock, and Barclay's light still burned.
Eleven-thirty, and still, reading or writing, the
captain seemed occupied in the old poker room,
and the door remained closed. Once or twice
Brayton heard him moving about, and in his own
excitement and interest the boy found it impos
sible to think of anything else. Twelve o'clock
came. He was beginning to undress and prepare
for bed, still uneasily watching the light shining
through the crack of the door, when his straining
ears caught the sound of a footfall underneath his
8
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
window. It opened on the yard, and the sill was
only five feet or so above the ground. A hand
was uplifted without and tapped gently on the
sash, and as Brayton drew aside the curtain Harry
Winn's face was revealed in the moonlight.
" Come to the porch in front," he muttered low.
" I must speak with you."
Brayton was out on the dark piazza in half a
minute. He found Winn nervously pacing the
boards.
" I told my wife I had to come out and think
quietly awhile," he said, as he extended a hand
to his silent classmate. " She heard of this — this
damnable business almost as quick as it happened.
That girl of ours hears everything and tells any
thing. There's no doubt about it, I suppose.
You were there? You heard it at once, didn't
you? What does— Tie say?" And Winn's nod
indicated that he meant Barclay.
"Nothing," said Brayton, briefly. "I haven't
seen him
"But he's up. The light's in his window.
He's writing — or something. Look here, Bray
ton, you know what's got to come of this. That
damned Irishman must challenge him, or be cut
and kicked about by all his kind in the cavalry.
It isn't Barclay's fight; it's mine. The more I
think of it the more I know that, contemptible a
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
blackguard as Bralligan is, he is still an officer of
the regiment. He has been knocked down, and
has the right to demand the only satisfaction there
is for a blow. You know it as well as I do. What
I've got to do right here and now is to_take that
fight off Barclay's hands, and you've got to help
me."
" S'pose he don't want it taken off his hands,"
said Brayton, sturdily. "He told him plain
enough he was ready to meet any demand "
Winn reddened even in the pallid moonlight.
" I say no man in this garrison- fights on my wife's
account except me — or with me. They're up
with Bralligan now, two or three of them, and I
want you to go there with me at once as my wit
ness. I mean to cowhide him to-night. Then if
he wants a meeting in the morning, I'm his man."
And as he spoke Winn thrashed nervously at
the railing with the stout whip he carried in his
hand.
"That won't fix it," answered Brayton, "and
you ought to have sense enough to know it. Bar
clay has the precedence. The Mick couldn't chal
lenge you until he'd fought him — or been refused
a fight. You go to bed, Winn," and Brayton
spoke even lower. "Your wife must have heard
you just now, and first thing you know Barclay
will hear you, and" — with almost comical irrele-
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
you don't want to meet him this way,
when you haven't even called on him."
Winn reddened again. There was a tinge of
bitterness in his tone as he answered, —
"Don't trouble yourself about Mrs. Winn's
hearing. She's placidly asleep — long ago. As
for my not calling, you know I've only been out
of my bed three days or so, and Captain Barclay
must understand that a man burdened as I have
been is in no mood for social observances. This
is all begging the question. You're the only man
I can ask to be my second. Finish your dressing
now and come."
" Winn, I won't do it," said Brayton, with flat-
footed decision. " This is my captain's affair, and,
from what I've seen of him since he joined, I'm
bound to say what's his is mine. Besides, you've
got no business mixing up in the matter. You've
got your wife to think of, and you've got that
commissary business to straighten out. Barclay
and I have no encumbrances of either kind." At
the moment, I fear me, the young gentleman
could have added, "Thank God!" for, with all
his appreciation of the physical perfections of his
classmate's wife, Mr. Brayton was keenly aware
of her many extravagances.
" Of course I've a wife," answered Winn, hotly.
" It's because of her I feel bound to take this up.
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
As for that commissary money, every cent will
be here to square the shortage, whether I am or
not. I'll tell you what others No! I can't
even tell you, Brayton. But an old friend of my
father's has offered his help. Now, once more,
will you come or not ?"
"No, Winn. You know well enough I'd see
you through if Hush ! There's Mullane and
some one else coming out of his quarters now."
"Then, by God! I'll go alone," exclaimed
Winn, "and it's got to be done before they get
away." And he would have gone springing down
the steps, but Brayton seized and held him.
"For God's sake, Harry, be quiet to-night.
Don't go near him. Quiet, man! Can't you see?
Those fellows are coming this way now!"
True enough, Mullane and his companion, who
had issued from the fourth set of quarters down
to the left, turned northward the moment they
reached the walk, the moonlight gleaming on the
buttons of their uniform frock-coats, but the sight
and faint sound of scuffling on Winn's porch
seemed to attract their attention. They stopped
as though to reconnoitre, and just then the front
door of Brayton's hall opened wide, and, with the
broad light at his back, Captain Barclay stepped
quietly forth.
"Brayton," he said, "you left the door ajar,
118 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
and it was impossible not to hear the latter part
of this conference. — Mr. Winn, I presume^" he
continued, with calm, courteous bow, as the two
young men, unclasping, turned and faced him.
"I infer that you purpose going to Mr. Bralli-
gan's quarters — now. Let me urge that you do
nothing of the kind. Brayton is right. I see
that, late as it is, some of their party are moving
this way. Pray remember that as yet this is
entirely my affair."
There was no time for other answer than a bow,
a mumbled word or two, an embarrassed accept
ance of the hand extended by the captain. Just
as he said, Mullane and his friend were coming
rapidly up the walk. They passed the Winns'
gate, entered that of Brayton, and then it ap
peared that Mullane's friend was the ubiquitous
Hodge, that Mullane was manifestly in his glory,
and that both were perceptibly in liquor.
" Gintlemen," said the doughty captain, halt
ing at the foot of the steps and raising his forage
cap with magnificent sweep, "gintlemen, I am
the beerer of a missige from me f rind Mr. Bralli-
gan. Have I the honor of addhressin' Captain
Barclay?" Fondly did Mullane* imagine that he
impressed his hearers as did Sir Lucius O' Trig
ger; and much did he remind one of them, at
least, of Captain Costigan of blessed memory.
A TROOPER GALAHAD. H9
"This is Captain Barclay," that gentleman
answered, in low tones, with a smile of amuse
ment at Mullane's grandiloquent prelude, yet
stepping quickly forward to meet the envoys.
Winn could not but note that the captain's move
ment accomplished at once two objects. It left
him and Brayton in the shade; it kept Mullane
and Hodge in the moonlight and off the steps.
"Pardon my suggesting that a lady sleeps in the
front room aloft there, and that you speak low, so
as not to disturb her. Where is your message?"
This was trying. Mullane loved his chest tones
as he did his whiskey. His low voice was apt to
be thick and husky and unimpressive, and to
night he was over-weighted with the sense of the
gravity and importance of his mission, if with
nothing else.
"Sorr," he said, with another flourish of the
cap, "in accordince with the practice of gintle-
men in the old arrumy, I am the bearer of a verr-
bal missige '
The Quaker captain had already amazed the
old dragoon sergeants by the intricacy and extent
of his knowledge of their manners and customs.
Now came a surprise for the officers.
" Pardon my interrupting," he said. " I do not
assume to instruct in such matters, but there is
manifestly only one kind of message ' according
120 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
to the customs of the old army/ " and here he
smiled quietly, " that should come from Mr. Bral-
ligan now, and it must come in writing. I de
cline to recognize any other." Here J3rayton
nudged "VYinn approvingly, but the subalterns
maintained a decorous silence.
" I've niver hurr'd of a challenge being refused
on that account/' said Mullane, majestically,
"and if me wurreds are not sufficient, here's me
frind Mr. Hodge "
"Your words are not brought into question,
Captain Mullane, but the manner of your mes
sage is. Let your friend put it in writing, and it
will be received. Good-night to you, sir."
And, to Mullane's utter amaze and confusion,
quickly followed by an explosion of wrath, Cap
tain Barclay coolly turned and walked within
doors.
"Hould on dthere!" cried Mullane, as he
started to spring up the steps, but Brayton
stepped in front of him, and Hodge nervously
grabbed his arm. Neither knew much of the
" code" of the old days, but each had learned that
Barclay rarely made a mistake. Winn, too, tall
and strong, stepped in front of the angry Irish
man as he broke out into expletives. "No more
of that here, captain," he cried, forgetful of any
consideration of rank. " This noise will wake the
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
post. Rest assured your principal will get all
the fight he wants;" and then, with growing
wrath, for Mullane was struggling to come to the
steps, "so will you, by God, if you advance
another foot."
"Winn — Winn, for heaven's sake, I say!"
cried Brayton, seizing the uplifted arm. "Go
home, Mullane. Damn it, you're in no shape to
handle such a matter to-night. Go home, or I
swear I'll call the officer of the day. He's com
ing now!" he exclaimed; and it was true, for the
sound of excited voices had reached the adjoining
quarters, and out from the doorway, sashed and
belted, came the massive form of Captain Blythe,
his sabre clanking on the door-sill. Out, too,
from Winn's hallway shot a broad beam of light,
and hastening along the porch came a tall, grace
ful form in some clinging rose-tinted wrapper^ all
beribboned and fluffy and feminine. The men
fell away and Mullane drew back as Mrs. Winn
scurried to her husband's side and laid her white
hand on his arm. Forth again on the other side
of Winn came Barclay, and his deep tones broke
the sudden silence.
"Captain Mullane, leave this spot instantly,"
he ordered, stern and low. " I'll answer to you in
the morning."
"Come out of this, Mullane," demanded
122 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
Blythe, striding in at the gate. "Delay one
second, and I'll order you under arrest."
Up slowly went Mullane's cap with the same
incomparable sweep. "In the prisince of lee-
dies/' said he, "I'm disarrumed. Captain Bar
clay, I'll see ye in the marrnin'."
But when the marrnin' came both Mullane and
his principal, beside bewildering headaches, had
graver matters to deal with than even a very
pretty quarrel.
CHAPTEK IX.
FROM the night of her brilliant appearance at
the garrison ball, not once had Mrs. Winn an op
portunity to exchange a dozen words with Cap
tain Barclay. Her husband, as has been said, had
failed to call on his new next-door neighbor,
although Winn had been well enough to be about
for several days, and until he did call it was im
possible for Barclay to enter their doors, and ex
pedient that he should avoid Mrs. Winn wherever
it was possible to do so. This might not have
been difficult, even though the same roof covered
both households, — that of the Winns on the south
and that of the Barclay-Brayton combination on
the north side,— but for Laura Winn herself, who
seemed to be out on the porch every afternoon as
the captain came walking back from stables; and
the women who were apt to gather at Mrs.
Blythe's at that time declared that there was
something actually inviting, if not imploring, in
the way Mrs. Winn would watch for him, and
bow, and seem to hover where he could hardly
avoid speaking to her. Three times at least since
that memorable party had she been there "on
123
124: ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
watch," as Mrs. Faulkner expressed it, and
though his bow was courtesy itself, and his
"Good-evening, Mrs. Winn," most respectful,
and even kindly, if one could judge by the tone
of his voice, not another word did he speak. He
passed on to his own gateway, Brayton generally
at his side, and his stable dress was changed for
parade uniform or dinner before he again made
his appearance.
After the manner of the day, most of the
cavalry contingent stopped in at the club-room on
the way back from evening stables. Brayton
used to do so, but, though no one could say his
captain had preached to him on the subject, some
influence either of word or of example had taken
effect, and the young bachelor seemed entirely
content to cut the club and the social tipple, and
to trudge along by his new companion's side.
They had been getting "mighty thick" for cap
tain and second lieutenant, said some of the
other officers; but, serenely indifferent to what
others thought or said, the two kept on their
way.
" Thought you were goin' to wear mournin' for
Lawrence the rest of your natural life, Brayton;
and here you are tyin' to Barclay as if Lawrence
had never lived," said Mr. Bralligan, only a day
or two before Lawrence's return, and Brayton
"K TROOPER GALAHAD. 125
started almost as though stung. What Bralligan
said was not half as ill grounded as most of his
statements, and Brayton was conscious of some
thing akin to guilt and self-reproach. In com
mon with most of the regiment, he had felt very
sore over Lawrence's going. He had been much
attached to that gallant and soldierly captain, but
now that another had taken his place, and he
could compare or contrast the two, the youngster
began to realize with something like a pang of
distress — as though it were disloyal to think so —
that in many ways Barclay was " head and shoul
ders" the superior man. Lawrence never rose till
eight o'clock except when in the field. Lawrence
rarely read anything but the papers and inter
minable controversies over the war. Lawrence,
despite the claims of Ada and little Jimmy, often
spent an evening at the club, and always stopped
there on his way from stables. Lawrence never
studied, and off the drill-ground never taught.
Indeed, almost all the drills the troop had known
for months and months Brayton himself had con
ducted. No wonder the boy had wasted hours of
valuable time. No wonder there was a little
game going on among the youngsters in Bray-
ton's " back parlor" many a day. He had simply
been started all wrong.
But even before Barclay's books were unpacked
126 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
the new captain had found means to interest the
young fellow in professional topics that Lawrence
had never seemed to mention. Barclay had evi
dently been taking counsel with progressive sol
diers before joining his new regiment, had been
reading books of their choosing, and among others
was a valuable treatise on the proper method of
bitting horses, and he found that here was a mat
ter that Lawrence and Brayton had never thought
of and that Brayton said was never taught them
at the Point, — which was strictly true. To the
amaze and unspeakable indignation of Denny
Sullivan, who was soon to be overhauled on graver
points, the doughboy had taken his lieutenant
from horse to horse in the troop as they stood at
rest during drill, and shown him at least twenty
bits out of the forty-five in line that were no fit
at all. He showed him some that were too broad
from bar to bar and that slid to and fro in the
tortured creature's mouth; others that hung too
low, almost "fell through;" others whose curb-
chain or strap, instead of fitting in the groove,
bore savagely on the delicate bones above it and
tormented the luckless charger every time his
rider drew rein. Barclay gave the boy his own
carefully studied hand-book; not another cavalry
officer then at Worth had read it, though several
had heard of it. The youngster was set to work
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
fitting new bits by measurement to the mouth of
every horse in the troop.
Then Barclay drew him into the discussion, of
the cavalry system of saddling as then prescribed,
—the heavy tree set away forward close to the
withers, — and Brayton could only say that " that
was tactics and the way they'd always done it."
But Galahad pointed out that the tactics then in
use were written of a foreign dragoon saddle with
a long flat bearing surface. It was all very well
for that to be set as far forward as it would go,
because even then the centre of gravity of the
rider would be well back on the horse. "But/'
said he, "you take this short McClellan tree,
place that away forward, and then set a man in it ;
his centre of gravity will rest in front of the
centre of motion of the horse, — will throw the
weight on the forehand and use up his knees and
shoulders in no time." This, too, set Brayton to
studying and thinking, while Mullane and Fel
lows declared Sir Galahad a crank, and even
Brooks and Blythe, wedded to tradition, thought
him visionary. Then when the books came, Gala
had unpacked, and just where the poker-table
used to stand it stood now, but it was covered
with beautiful maps of Alsace and Lorraine, and
Galahad's desk with pamphlets sent him from
abroad, the earliest histories of the memorable
128 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
campaign about Metz and Sedan. The next
thing Brayton knew he was as deeply interested
as his captain, and, lo, other men came to look
and wonder and go off shaking their heads, —
those of them who were of the Mullane persua
sion sneering at those "book-generals," while
others, like Blythe, pulled up a chair as invited
and followed the junior captain through his
modest explanation with appreciative eyes.
Those were days when there was all too little time
for study and improvement, thanks to the almost
incessant Indian scouting required; but here was
"Worth, a big post, and here was a four-troop bat
talion with a gentleman and not a bad soldier at
its head, and it had not occurred to him to teach
them anything or to require of them anything
beyond the usual attention to stables, troop-drill,
and an occasional parade. If his men were
reasonably ready to take the field in pursuit of
Kiowa, Comanche, or horse-thief, and to furnish
escort for ambulance and train when the disburs
ing officers went to and fro, that was all that could
be expected of him or them in those halcyon days.
And now "this blasted doughboy substitute" had
come down here and was proposing to stir them
all up, make them all out " so many ignoramuses,"
said Mullane. "Bedad, the thing is revolution
ary!" And that was enough to damn it, for revo-
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
hition is a thing no Irishman will tolerate, when
he doesn't happen to be in it himself.
Still another thing had occurred to make Bar
clay something apart from the bachelors. No
sooner had his modest kit of household goods ar
rived than the unused kitchen of Brayton's quar
ters was fitted up; Hannibal was ensconced
therein; a neat little dining-room was made of
what had been designed for a small bedchamber
on the ground-floor, and Barclay amazed the mess
by setting forth champagne the last evening he
dined there as a member, and then retired to the
privacy of his own establishment, as he had at
Sanders. The Winns' house-maid had of course
dropped in to see how Hannibal was getting
along, and dropped out to tell her discoveries,
which were few. Then Brayton found the mess
saying things about Barclay he could not agree
with, and he, too, resigned and became a mess
mate of his captain, — a change for the better that
speedily manifested itself in the healthy white of
his clear eyes and a complexion that bore no trace
of fiery stimulants such as were indulged in else
where. Then there was talk of others leaving the
"Follansbee family" and asking to join at Bray-
ton's, and this gave umbrage to Erin as repre
sented in the bachelors' mess. And so an anti-
Barclay feeling had sprung up at the post, among
9
130 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
the unlettered at least, and these were days in
which the unlettered were numerous. "Sorry
for you, Brayton, me boy/7 grinned the senior
sub of Fellows's troop. "It must be tough to
come down to this after Lawrence.77 And he was
amazed at Brayton7s reply.
" Tough ? Yes, for it shows me how much time
I7ve wasted.77
"Wait till we get Galahad out on the trail
wid his new-fangled bits and seats,7' sneered
Mullane but a day or two before. " That'll take
the damned nonsense out of him. Faith, whin
he goes I hope I may go along too to see the fun.77
And, sooner than he thought for, the Irish cap
tain had his wish.
One o'clock had just been called off by the
sentries, and the moon was well over to the west,
when the door of the major's quarters was opened
and he with his lingering guests came forth upon
the broad piazza, the red sparks of their cigars
gleaming anew as they felt the fan of the rising
breeze. Clear and summer-like as was the sky,
there was a reminder of the snow-peaks in the
wings of the wind, and Lawrence huddled his old
cavalry cape about his shoulders as he faced it.
He was talking eagerly, perhaps a little bombas
tically, of this great new mining company in
which BufFstick was prominent as a director. He
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
was full of hope and anticipation and disposed
to patronize a trifle his friends who, wedded to
the humdrum of the army, were debarred from
so fine an opportunity of making money in abun
dance. So many of the number were going to
do so much in the same way when first they left
us for the broader paths of civil life.
"I tell you, Brooks," he said, enthusiastically,
"I wouldn't take ten thousand dollars cash this
night for my chance of making twice that sum
within the year. Buffstick turns everything he
touches into gold."
"Wonder if Barclay knows these mines," said
De Lancy, reflectively, flipping the ashes from the
end of his cigar. " He has never opened his head
about his mines to a soul. "We don't know where
they are."
" I don't know," saiH. Lawrence, briefly. Even
yet the mention of Barclay chafed him a bit. " I
know this, though, that that company wouldn't
offer me any such salary as twenty-five hundred
dollars a year just to boss their men, unless there
was big money in it somewhere. It's the first
time I ever knew what it was to be indifferent to
the coming of the paymaster. By the way, he
ought to be here day after to-morrow, or to-mor
row night in fact; it's long after twelve now.
The escorts were warned as we came along."
132 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
"I think it a mistake/7 said Brooks,, gravely,
"to let any one know beforehand when the pay
master is to start. That Friday gang probably
musters a hundred by this time. It's where all
our thieves and deserters go. I haven't a doubt
your old sergeant has joined them by this time,
Lawrence. I believe that's where Marsden's
gone, and that we'll hear from them in force
again before we're a month older. They've kept
reasonably quiet all winter, but June isn't far off.
I'm blessed if I would want to make that trip
from San Antonio with forty thousand dollars in
greenbacks with less than a big troop of cavalry
to guard it."
"He's got more money than that this time/'
said Lawrence. "Most of these men have four
months' pay due them; so have the cavalry along
the route. He has two other posts to pay.
Hallo!" he cried, breaking suddenly off, "what's
all the light about down at the sutler's? Here
comes the sergeant of the guard."
Eunning diagonally across the parade, the
moonlight glinting on his buttons and accoutre
ments, an infantry non-commissioned officer was
speeding towards the quarters of Captain Blythe,
near the upper end of the row; but, catching
sight of the group at the major's, he suddenly
swerved and came straight towards them, spring-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. ^33
ing over the gurgling acequia and the dusty road
way and halting at the gate.
"What is it, sergeant?" asked two or three
voices at once.
"I was looking for the officer of the day, sir.
Is he here?"
"Over at his quarters, probably. What's
amiss?"
"There's two of Fuller's men in, sir, from
Crockett, — just about played out. They swear
that not an hour after sunset the whole Friday
gang — it couldn't have been anything else —
came a-riding out from the foot-hills over towards
the Wild Eose and kept on to the southeast.
They saw the dust against the sky and hid in the
rocks away off to the east of the trail, and they
swear there must have been fifty of 'em at least."
He had hardly time to finish the words when
the sutler himself came galloping over the parade,
" hot foot," on his wiry mustang, and drew up in
front of the gate. "Has the sergeant told you?"
he asked, breathlessly. "It's Reed and his part
ner, — two of the best men on my ranch, — and
they can't be mistaken. You know what it must
mean, gentlemen. The gang is after the pay
master, and I think Colonel Frazier should know
at once." "No wonder Fuller was breathless, bare
headed, and only half dressed. Anywhere from
134 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
thirty to forty thousand dollars might be diverted
from its proper and legitimate use if that Friday
gang should overpower the guard and get away
with it. His coffers were filled with sutler checks
redeemable in currency at the pay-table, as was
the wonted way of the old army. It was a case
of feast or famine with Fuller, and he poured his
tale into sympathetic ears. Brooks himself went
over to the colonel's, and found that weasel of a
chief already awake. Mrs. Frazier didn't allow
galloping over her parade in the dead of the night
without an attempt to detect the perpetrator.
That vigilant dame had more than once brought
graceless skylarkers to terms, and the quadrupe-
dante putrem sonitu of Fuller's mustang repre
sented to her incensed and virtuous ears only the
mad lark of some scapegrace subaltern, who per
chance had not been as attentive to 'Manda as ho
should have been, and she was out of dreamland
and over at the window before Fuller fairly drew
rein.
"What is it, Brooks, me boy?" asked Frazier
from his casement, as did gallant O'Dowd of his
loyal Dobbin. "I'll be down in a minute." By
the time he reached the door Fuller had hurried
up his stiff and wearied scouts, and in the presence
of a little party of officers the story was told again,
and told without break or variation. There was
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 135
only one opinion. The scattered outlaws had
easily got wind of the coming of the paymaster
with his unusual amount of treasure, and, quickly
assembling, they were heading away to meet him
far to the southeast of the big post, very possibly
planning to ambuscade the party in the winding
denies of the San Saba Hills. Not a moment was
to be lost. For the first time the full weight of
his divorce from all that was once his profession
and his pride fell on Ned Lawrence, as for an
instant the colonel's eyes turned to him as of old,
— the dashing and successful leader of the best
scouts sent from Worth in the last two years.
Then, as though suddenly realizing that he had
no longer that arm to lean on, old Frazier spoke :
" Why, Brooks, you'll have to go. I can't trust
such a command to Mullane, and it'll take two
companies at least."
And twenty minutes later, answering the sharp
summons of their veteran sergeants, the men of
Mullane's and Barclay's troops were tumbling out
of their bunks and into their boots, "hell-bent Tor
a rousin' ride," and the old captain of Troop "D"
was saying to the new, " Captain Barclay, may I
ask you for a mount? I've been longing for two
years past for a whack at this very gang, and now
that the chance has come I cannot stay here and
let my old troop go."
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
And all men present marked the moment of
hesitation, the manner of reluctance, before Bar
clay gravely answered, "There is nothing at my
disposal to which you are not most welcome, Colo
nel Lawrence; and yet — do you think — you
ought to go?"
"I could not stay here, sir, and see my old
troop go without me," was the answer.
Few were the families at Fort Worth that were
not up and out on the piazzas or at the windows
to see Brooks's detachment as it marched away
in the light of the setting moon just as the stars
were paling in the eastern sky; but the merciful
angel of sleep spread her hushing wings over the
white bed where two children lay dreaming, an3
never until the troopers were miles beyond the
vision of the keen-eyed sentries did Ada know that
the loved father, restored to her but a few hours
before, was once more riding the Texan trail,
soldier sense of duty leading on, and God alone
knowing to what end.
CHAPTER X.
THE day that broke on old Fort Worth thus
late in a sunshiny May proved one of deep
anxiety. There was no telegraph wire then to
connect it with the distant head-quarters of the
department. If there had been it would have
been cut six times a week. There was no way of
waving back the coming convoy or of signalling
danger. Crockett Springs lay a long day's ride
to the southeast, and the little troop of cavalry
there in camp was looking for the coming of no
call upon it for duty until early on the morrow
it should supply the paymaster and his party with
breakfast, the ambulance with fresh mules and
driver, and the night riders of the escort with
their relief. Forty troopers from Crockett
Springs would take the place of those who had
come from the San Saba, and trot along with the
paymaster until, somewhere about midway to
Worth, they should meet the forty sent out the
previous night to bivouac on the prairie and be
ready to take up the gait and keep it until the
man of money and his safe were well within the
limits of the reservation. But the fifty-mile stage
137
138 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
from Crockett to the southeast was the worst on
the long line. The road wound over the divide
to the valley of the San Saba, and on the way had
to twist and turn through denies of the range of
hills, where more than a dozen times Indians and
outlaws had defied the little detachments of
cavalry scouting after them. The worst part of
the pass lay some twenty miles beyond the stage
station at Crockett Springs. Neither Indians nor
outlaws, to be sure, had been heard of in that
neighborhood for several months, but that proved
nothing. It was easy for the latter to sweep from
their supposed fastnesses in the Apache range to
the west, and, issuing from the Wild Rose Pass,
to water miles below the springs and then line the
rocks in the heart of the San Saba Pass, without
a trooper being the wiser. Forty cavalrymen, as
Lawrence knew, would be the major's escort from
the camp on the Rio San Saba beyond the range.
Forty men disciplined and organized ought ordi
narily to be able to cope with any band of outlaws
to be found in Texas. But when, as was now
reasonably certain, this far-famed Friday gang
had received accessions from the troops themselves
and had welcomed the deserters and desperadoes
so frequently sloughed off from the soldier skin
of Uncle Sam in the days close following the great
war, there was grave reason for precaution, and
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
graver still for anxiety. Question as he might,
Frazier could not shake an atom of the original
statement of Fuller's men. Fifty mounted out
laws, at least count, with a dozen led horses, they
had seen through their field-glass far over the
prairie, pushing southeastward from the direction
of Wild Rose Pass of the Apache range, straight
for the lower valley through which ran the little
stream that had its source at Crockett Springs.
So there were anxious hearts at Worth, for,
while it was felt that Brooks would lose no
moment and was well on his way at four o'clock
of this bright Sunday morning, he had still some
sixty miles to traverse before he could get to
Crockett, rest and bait his men and horses, pick
up Cramer's troop there camped, and then push
ahead for the San Saba, where he expected to find
the outlaw gang disposed in ambuscade, confi
dently awaiting the coming of their prey.
Now, Brooks had men enough to thrash them
soundly, but unless he caught them in the act of
spoliation he lacked authority. Just as sure as he
pitched into a force of armed frontiersmen, they
would appeal to the courts, and public sentiment
would be dead against him. He could doubtless
push ahead through the range, careless of lurk
ing scouts of the would-be robbers, meet Major
Pennywise and his protectors, and escort them
140 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
back in safety. That problem presented no great
difficulty; but what Frazier wanted and Brooks
wanted and everybody, presumably, wante'd was
that the outlaws should be caught in the act and
be punished then and there. The question was
how to catch them in the act without being them
selves discovered, and before the gang had had
time to inflict much damage on the paymaster's
party. There was the rub. "Why, their first
volley, delivered from ambush, might kill half the
outfit and the paymaster too," said Frazier. " No,
we dare not risk it, Brooks. Push through and
pull him through, that's the best we can do — un
less," and here came the redeeming clause, "un
less on the way you should light 071 some unfore
seen chance. Then — use your discretion."
Mounted on the very horse he used to ride as
troop commander, and with the old familiar horse-
equipments, Ned Lawrence left the post at the
major's side. He had slept as only soldiers can,
curled up in the stage-coach, during the previous
afternoon, and was in far better trim for the long
ride in saddle than Captain Mullane, who with
bleary eyes and muddled head rode solus in front
of the leading troop, liis one lieutenant, Mr. Bral-
ligan, being reported by Dr. Collabone's assistant
as sick in quarters, which indeed he was, with a
lump the size of an apple on the side of his head,
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
and another, apparently the heft and density of
a six-pounder cannon-ball, rolling about inside of
it. "D" Troop, jogging easily along at the rear
of column, was led by Barclay and Brayton, both
of whom had marked the absence of the subaltern
of the leading company, and neither of whom was
surprised when ten miles out there came galloping
past them, with a touch of the hand to his hat-
brim, the late regimental commissary, Lieutenant
Harry Winn.
"That's good!" said Brayton, as he saw his
classmate ride up to the major and report, then
fall back and range himself alongside Mullane.
But Barclay was silent.
"You think he ought not to have come?" asked
Brayton, half hesitatingly, as he glanced at his
silent leader.
" I'm thinking more of others — who should be
here," was the answer. "Yet those two have so
much to leave." And Brayton, following the
glance of his captain's eyes, fully understood.
The morning grew warm as the sun began to
climb above the distant low-lying hills to the east.
The dust soon rose in dense clouds from beneath
the crushing hoofs, and, leaving Brayton with the
troop, Barclay cut across the chord of a long arc
in the trail and reined up alongside the major.
The command at the moment was moving at a
142 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
sharp trot through a long, low depression in the
prairie-like surface. Brooks returned the cap
tain's punctilious salute with a cheery nod and
cordial word of greeting.
"With your permission, sir, I will fall back a
hundred yards or so, divide the troop into sec
tions, and so i*void the dust."
Brooks glanced back over his shoulder. " Why,
certainly, captain/' said he. "I ought to have
known the dust would be rising by this time.
It's eight o'clock," he continued, glancing at his
watch. Barclay turned in saddle and signalled
with his gauntlet, whereat Brayton slackened
speed to the walk, and a gap began to grow be
tween the rearmost horses of Mullane's troop and
the head of " D's" already dusty column.
"Bide with us a moment, won't you, Barclay?"
called the major, significantly, as his subordinate
seemed on the point of reining aside to wait for
his men. "I want you two to know each other."
And the new and the old captain of " D" Troop,
who had courteously shaken hands with each
other when presented in the dim light of the de
clining moon at four o'clock, now trotted side by
side, Lawrence eying his successor with keen yet
pleasant interest. He had been hearing all man
ner of good of him during the wakeful watches of
the night, and was manfully fighting against the
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 143
faint yet irrepressible feeling of jealous dislike
with which broader and better men than he have
had to struggle on being supplanted. Do what
he might to battle against it, Lawrence had been
conscious of it hour after hour, and felt that he
winced time and again when some of the callers
spoke even guardedly of the changes Barclay was
making in the old troop, changes all men except
the ultra-conservative ranker element (as the
ranker was so often constituted at that peculiar
time, be it understood) could see were for the
better.
"You and Barclay lead on, will you, Ned?"
said the major, in his genial way. "I wish to
speak with Mullane a moment." Whereat he
reined out to the right and waited for the big
Irishman to come lunging up. Mullane was al
ready spurring close at his heels, gloomily eying
the combination in front. " There are Oirish and
Oirish," as one of their most appreciative and
broad-minded exponents, Private Terence Mul-
vaney, has told us; and it galled the veteran
dragoon to see his junior in rank bidden to ride
even for the moment at the head of the swiftly
moving column. So, reckless of the fact that his
individual spurt would call for a certain forcing
of the pace along his entire troop, now moving in
long column of twos, Mullane had spurred his
144 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
horse to close tlie twelve-yard gap between him
self and the major's orderly, determined that
there should be no conference of the powers in
which he was not represented.
"Captain Mullane," said Brooks, "I see it is
getting dusty. You might divide into sections,
as i D? troop has done, and keep fifty yards apart,
so that the dust can blow aside and not choke
your men."
"This is *L? Troop, sorr, and my men are not
babes in arrums," was Mullane's magnificent re
ply. At any other time he might have felt the
pertinence of the suggestion, but here was a case
where a doughboy captain, bedad, had instigated
the measure for the comfort of his men. That
was enough to damn it in the eyes of the old dra
goon. The answer was shouted^ too, with double
intent. Mullane desired Barclay to hear what
he thought of such over-solicitude; but Barclay,
riding onward sturdily if not quite so easily as
was Lawrence, gave no sign. He was listening,
with head inclined, to the words of the keen cam
paigner on his right.
Brooks was quick to note the intention of the
Irish officer, and equally quick to note the flushed
and inflamed condition of his face, the thickness
of his tongue. "So ho, my Celtic friend,"
thought he, as he saw that two canteens were
Z TROOPER GALAHAD. 145
swung on the off side of Mullane's saddle, one at
the cantle under the rolled blanket, the other half
shaded by the bulging folds of the overcoat at the
pommel, "I suspected there was more whiskey
than wit in your eagerness at the start; now I
know it."
But even to Mullane the major would not
speak discourteously. "We all know 'I/ Troop
is ready for anything, captain," he smilingly an
swered, "but I have to call for unusual exer
tion to-day, and the fresher they are to-night the
better. Let them open out, as I say," he con
tinued; and Mullane saw it was useless to put on
further airs.
" You Hind to it, sergeant," he grunted over his
shoulder to his loyal henchman, and then, unin
vited, ranged up alongside the leader.
The prairie was open here; the road split up
into several tracks from time to time, and the
men could have ridden platoon front without
much difficulty for two or three miles. Away to
the southeast the ground rose in slow, gradual,
almost imperceptible slope to the edge of the far
horizon, not a tree or shruB exceeding a yard in
height breaking anywhere the dull monotony of
the landscape. Eastward, miles and miles away,
a line of low rolling hills framed the dull hues
of the picture. ISTorthward there was the same
10
146 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
almost limitless expanse of low, lazy undulation.
To the right front, the south and southwest, the
land seemed to fall away in even longer, lazier
billows, until it flattened out into a broad valley,
drained by some far-distant," invisible stream.
Only to the west and northwest, over their right
shoulders, was there gleam of something brighter.
The faint blue outline of the far-away Apache
range was still capped in places By glistening
white, while straight away to the northwest, back
of and beyond the dim dust-cloud through which
the swallow-tailed guidons were peeping, hovered
over their winding trail the bold and commanding
heights, Fort 'Worth's shelter against the keen
blasts that swept in winter-time across the prairie
from the upper valley of the Rio Bravo. Four
hours out, and just where the road dipped into
that broad deep swale a quarter-mile behind the
rearmost troopers, — just where the wreck of one
of Fuller's wagons and the bones of two of Ful
ler's mules and the soft spongy mud to the west
of the trail told how the waters could gather there
in the rainy season and evaporate to nothingness
when needed in the dry, — a solitary stake driven
into the yielding soil bore on bullet-perforated
cross-board the legend, "20 miles to Worth and
only 20 rods to Hell."
Only twenty miles in four tours, with fresh
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
horses and the cool of the morning, and a pay
master with forty thousand dollars in deadly
danger some sixty to eighty miles away. Slow
going that, yet scientific. Not another drop of
water could those lively chargers hope to have
until they reached the springs at Crockett, forty
miles away. Thrice has Brooks halted for brief
ten minutes' rest, the resetting of saddles, etc.,
and now, after fifteen minutes' lively jog, he sig
nals " walk" again, and glances back to watch the
march of his men. By this time the column is
long drawn out. The two troops are split up into
four sections each, riding a little over a dozen
men in a bunch; by this means they are relieved
from the ill effects of the choking clouds of dust.
Mullane halts with the major. It pleases him to
convey the impression to his men that Brooks
can't get along without him. A big pull at his
pommel canteen, ten minutes back, has tempo
rarily braced him, and he wants to talk, whereas
Brooks, intent on the duty before him, wishes to
think.
"Hwat time will we make Crockett's, major?"
"Not before five or five-thirty," is the brief
answer.
"'L' Troop can do it in two hours less."
" So could ' D,' if it hadn't to push on again at
nightfall." Brooks answers in civil tone, despite
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
the hint conveyed by the brevity of his words,
despite the conviction that is growing on him as
he somewhat warily glances over his companion,
that what "L" might do its captain won't do if
he consults that canteen again. Two silent 'but
keen-eared orderlies are sitting in saddle close be
side their respective officers, and it will not do to
give his thoughts away.
Then Mullane tries another tack. He seeks
confidential relations with his chief; and when
an Irishman has a man he is jealous of to talk
about and whiskey to start him, he needs no sup
ply of facts; they bubble from his seething brain,
manufactured for the occasion.
"The Preacher was caught where he couldn't
get out of it," says he, with a leering wink at the
leading horseman. " Is he larnin' his thrade from
Lawrence, afther robbin' him av his throop?"
And now Brooks fires up unexpectedly. Turn
ing quickly on the Irishman with anger in his
eyes, the major bends forward over the pommel.
" Captain Mullane," he says, so low that the near
by troopers fail to catch his words, so distinctly
that the captain cannot fail to, "there are things
of more value in a trade than the tricks of it that
you seem to know so well. You can learn more
from Captain Barclay that is worth knowing than
you can ever teach him, and I'll listen to no slur
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
at his expense. You've been drinking too much,
Mullane. Take my advice and pull the stopper
out of that canteen and put one on your tongue."
The Irishman boils up with wrath. The idea
of Major Mildmanners pitching into him — him,
that was once the pride of the Second Dragoons!
— and praising that white-livered parson ! Whur-
roo! Mullane at the moment could have flung
commission and conscience to the wind, every
thing but that canteen. Nothing but the stern
and icy stare in Brooks's usually benignant eye
represses the outburst trembling on the tangling
tip of his tongue.
"If you knew — what I know, sorr, that man'd
not be ridin' wid his betthers," he begins, "and
it's this night that'll prove me wurrds."
CHAPTEK XL
IT was at four o'clock of a blistering afternoon,
twelve hours from the time of their start from
the post, that the leaders in the long-extended
column hove in sight of a patch of green down
in a distant depression to the south that marked
the site of Crockett Springs. Beyond it, hem
ming the broad, shallow valley, there rose a long
wave of bare, desolate heights, rounded and bil
lowing in soft and graceful contours as they
rolled away northeastward, abrupt and jagged
towards the south and southwest, where the
stream seemed to have torn a pathway for the
sudden torrents of the springtide that foamed
away towards the broader valley of the Bravo.
At the point where, rounding the nose of a low
ridge, the trail twisted into view of Crockett's,
the major halted to look back over his command,
still tripping steadily onward in little bunches,
each a dozen strong, each followed by its own
little dust-cloud, each independent, apparently, of
the others, yet moving as part of one harmonious
train. Foremost, the group at the head of column
had received accessions. Fuller, the sutler, finely
150
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
mounted and bristling with arms of the latest and
most approved pattern, backed by two sun-tanned
Texans from his ranch, had overtaken the com
mand at noon, bent on sharing its fortunes in the
tussle anticipated with the outlaws; anol they
were now riding with "head-quarters," from
which, on the other hand, two figures were miss
ing, — Lawrence and one of the orderlies. As
early as two o'clock the ex-captain had pushed
on ahead, a double object in view, to warn
Cramer's troop of the coming of the Worth com
mand and the tidings they bore of the Friday
gang, also to have a little party mount at once and
gallop northeast, ten miles to the Saba trail, — a
short cut from Worth to the San Saba Pass, used
by horsemen in the rainy season. Captain Cramer
might or might not have received warning of the
appearance of the gang in the valley below his
camp at the Springs; but the "Fridays," whoever
their leader, would certainly have friends and
confederates on the watch near Worth, friends
who would probably take that very short cut and
gallop at speed to warn the gang of the coming
vengeance. Oddly enough, it was not Brooks nor
Lawrence who was first to think of this, but Bar
clay. It was his modest suggestion at the noon
halt, a suggestion that was put in form of a ques
tion, that had opened the major's eyes. "I re-
152 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
member, sir," said he, "that the Springs lie in a
sort of elbow; the trail runs nearly east and west
for many miles beyond them, and nearly north
and south on this side. Is there no way in which
scouts could gallop across our left and give warn
ing to those fellows ?"
"By Jove!" said Brooks, "there's the old San
Saba cut-off. What had we better do, Law
rence?" And Lawrence said, "Send at once a
sergeant with a set of fours to the left, until they
cut the trail, in order to prevent information go
ing to the gang that way, and to report if any
horsemen have already passed, which latter any
old frontiersman can tell at a glance." Mullane,
lurching drowsily in saddle all through the last
stage, had thrown himself on the turf and gone
sound asleep the moment the column halted.
Only with extreme difficulty could he be aroused
and made to understand what was wanted. Mr.
Winn, standing silently by, turned his back on
his temporary commander. He knew the Irish
captain was well-nigh swamped with liquor, and
he had no wish to bear witness against him.
Those were days so close to the war that officers,
old and new, still thought more of what a man
had done than of what he was doing, and Mul-
lane had been a gallant trooper. "You 'tind
to it, sergeant," was again the Irishman's com-
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
prehensive order to his first sergeant when at last
he grasped the significance of Brooks's words, and
five horsemen rode away at the lope to the left
front the moment the column again mounted.
Again did Brooks see fit to caution his leading
troop commander. "I am afraid you have sam
pled that whiskey once too often, Mullane. ]STo
more of it now, or you'll go to pieces when you
are most needed/7 he muttered, then rode on to
the head of column.
And the prediction came true. At the very
next halt Mullane had fallen into a stupor so
heavy that it was found impossible to rouse him.
The assistant surgeon with the column made brief
examination, then unslung and removed the can
teen at the captain's pommel, and whispered his
conclusion, — "Better leave his horse and orderly
here with him."
"Then," said the major, briefly, "Winn, you
command i I,' Troop." And when again the col
umn mounted, Barclay rode back and directed his
leading section to incline to the right, so that they
passed the lonely little group, the two horses
placidly cropping at the scant herbage, the or
derly squatting with averted face, filled at once
writh shame and sympathy, the recumbent figure
sprawled upon the prairie, its bloated red visage
buried in the blue-sleeved arms. Barclay's rear-
154 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
ward sections instinctively followed the lead, and
only furtive glances were cast, and no audible
comments made. The ranks were full of tough
characters in those days, yet imbued with a
strange fidelity in certain lines that reminds one
of the dog immortalized by Bret Harte at Red
Gulch, — the dog that had such deep sympathy for
a helplessly drunken man. There was nothing in
their code to prevent their stealing from Uncle
Sam, their captain, or any other victim, but to
hint that an officer or a friend was drunk would
have been the height of impropriety.
Winn, not Mullane, therefore, led "The
Devil's Own," as Mullane's troop — together with
others, no doubt — had been appropriately desig
nated. Barclay followed at the head of "D."
When nearing Crockett Springs at five o'clock, a
dim speck of courier came twisting out upon the
trail to meet them, and Brooks long after recalled
the thought that came to him as he read the de
spatch that reached him there. It was from Law
rence :
" Cramer got wind of the gang early this morn
ing, followed with thirty men into the San Saba,
had sharp fight, lost three men and many horses,
and is corralled out there, about fifteen miles
southeast. Cramer himself wounded, Dr. Augus-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 155
tin killed. Courier says most of Friday gang
gone to San Saba Pass. You, of course, must
push on to save Pennywise and his money. I
take five men and horses here and hasten to pull
Cramer out of the hole. Think you now justified
in attacking gang wherever found. No doubt
who were Cramer's assailants. Expect to reach
him before six and have one more square fight
out of Texas. Hastily,
" L."
"By heaven," cried Brooks, as he turned to
Fuller and the little party riding with him, all
studying his face with anxious eyes, "it's lucky
we got here with our horses in good shape.
Cramer is in a scrape somewhere out in the Kange.
Lawrence has gone to his aid, and there'll only be
time for a bite at Crockett's; then we must push
on and go ahead to the Pass." Then, dropping
into thought, " Now, which of Laura Waite's vic
tims will most welcome a square fight, — the man
she wronged by dropping, or the man she wronged
by taking?"
Two hours later, refreshed by cooling draughts
from the brook that bubbled away from the
Springs, their nostrils sponged out, their saddles
reset, their stomachs gladdened by a light feed,
the horses of the two troops seemed fit for a
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
chase, despite their sixty-mile inarch since dawn.
A courier, galloping ahead, had borne Brooks's
directions that coffee should be ready for his men,
and Cramer's camp guard had found time to add
substantial to that comforting fluid. ^Only half
an hour did the major delay, but even in that
time the horses had a quick rub-down with wisps
of hay, and the men themselves swung into sad
dle with an air that seemed to say, " There's fun
ahead!" The sun was shining aslant from low
down in the western sky as the column once more
jogged away on the dusty trail, Barclay's troop
now in the lead, opening out just as it had
marched most of the day, while Winn, between
whom and the new captain there had passed a few
courteous yet rather formal words at one or two
of the halts, gave to Mullane's old first sergeant
the charge of the leading section, and himself
rode at the distant rear of column, for by dusk,
if at all, straggling would be likely, and strag
gling would have to be suppressed with a firm
hand. The sun was at their backs now: away to
the front lay the rift in the hills through which
wound the San Saba road, and off to the right
front, well to the southeast, somewhere among
those jagged bluffs just beginning to tinge with
£old about their sharp and saw-like crests, lay the
scene of Cramer's morning tussle with the out-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 157
laws, who, as all now realized, must have opened
on him from ambush and shot down several horses
and not a few men before the troopers could re
ply. No further news had come from him, how
ever. The courier who brought the first news
said he had to run the gauntlet, although only a
few of the gang seemed to be hanging about the
scene of the fight, — their main body, as he had
previously reported, having gone in the direction
of the Pass. Brooks well knew that the moment
he reached the foot-hills he would have to move
with caution, throwing out advanced guards and,
where possible, flankers. He knew that He would
need every man, and believed that Cramer's peo
ple, now that Lawrence had gone to join them,
could take care of themselves; but the courier's
story, told to eager ears, had " told" in more ways
than one. His description of the ambuscade, the
way Cramer, the doctor, Sergeant O'Brien, and
others at the head of column were tumbled at the
first fire, all had tended to make the head of
Brooks's column an unpopular place to ride, — at
least less popular than earlier in the day. Fuller
and his men decided that their horses would be
the better for an hour or two of rest at the can
tonment, and so the column moved on without
them.
Longer grew the shadows and loftier the range
158 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
far to the front, as once more the pace quickened
to the trot, and Brooks and his men jogged on.
The doctor, a gifted young practitioner whom
Collabone held in high regard, seemed still to
think that he should have been allowed to take
an orderly and his instruments and gallop out on
Lawrence's trail to the aid of Cramer's wounded.
"Then what is to become of mine?" asked the
major, calmly. " I'm sorry for Cramer, sorry his
doctor is killed, but we may need you any moment
more than he does. No, Lawrence has gone to
him; he'll do what he can to make the wounded
comfortable, leave a small guard with them, and
then guide the rest of Cramer's troop through the
range to the San Saba, join either Pennywise's
party or ours, and between us we ought to give
those fellows a thrashing they'll never forget, —
if only they'll stand and take it, — if only," he
added below his breath, " they don't lay for us in
some of those deep twisting canons where twenty
men could overthrow a thousand."
The doctor admitted the force of his superior's
argument, and said no word. All the same, how
ever, his eyes kept wandering off from time to
time towards the foot-hills at the southeast, now
turning to violet in shade, " like half -mourning,"
said the doctor to Galahad, as, only half content,
he dropped back to ride a few moments at the
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 159
latter's side. "And it won't be long/' lie added
to himself, "before they'll be shrouded in deep
black. Pray God there's no ill omen in that!"
And now the road began to rise, very slowly,
very gently as yet, but perceptibly, towards the
still distant range. The long, spindle-shanked
shadows of the horses had disappeared. The sun,
yellow-red, was just sinking below the horizon
through the dust-clouds in their wake, when one
of the foremost troopers, close at Barclay's heels,
muttered, "It's somethin' movin', anyhow, and
what is it if it ain't a horse?" And Barclay and
the doctor, turning in saddle, caught his eye. " I
seen it a minute ago away out yonder towards
them buttes," continued the soldier, pointing out
across the prairie to their right front, "and I
couldn't be sure then. It's comin' this way, what
ever it is, cornin' fast. Look, sir! There it is
again!"
And with all their eyes Barclay and the doctor
gazed, but could see no moving object. Only the
rolling prairie, growing darker, dimmer every
minute, only the sun-tipped ridge and buttes and
shining pinnacles far away towards the San Saba.
And still the relentless trot went on, and the ma
jor's head was never turned; yet his orderly, too,
was ducking and peering from time to time off
to the southeast, just where the trooper had
160 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
pointed. Barclay, cautioning his sergeant to keep
a steady trot, spurred forward, the doctor follow
ing.
"What do you see?" they asked, and the or
derly too stretched forth a grimy gauntlet.
"Thought I saw a horse, sir. Some of 'K'
Troop's, maybe, for there was no rider."
With this corroborative evidence, Barclay
hailed the major. " Major, may I send a man or
two out in that direction?" he asked. "Two of
our people report seeing a horse galloping this
way."
But, even as he spoke, over a distant divide,
popping up against the sky just long enough to
catch the eyes of half a dozen men at once, a
black dot darted into view and then came bound
ing down the long, gradual incline, looming
larger and larger as it ran; presently the body
and legs could be made out, and then the sweep
ing mane and tail, — a riderless horse, a cavalry
horse probably, coming at eager speed to join his
comrade creatures in the long column. Cavalry-
horse undoubtedly, as, bounding nearer and
nearer, the flapping rein, the dangling, black-
hooded stirrups, the coarse gray blanket, and the
well-known saddle could be distinguished, a grue
some sight to trooper eyes, harbinger of disaster
if not of death in almost every case, — a cavalry
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
charger riderless! And at last, as with piteous
neigh the laboring steed came galloping straight
way on, a cry went up from two or three soldier
throats at the instant, a wail of soldier sorrow:
" God save us, fellows ! it's Blarney — it's the colo
nel's own!" Officers and men, they swarmed
about the weary, panting, trembling creature, as
hope died in every heart at what they saw: the
saddle and blanket, the old overcoat, rolled at the
pommel, that so often had stood between Ned
Lawrence and the Texas gales, were all dripping
with blood, yet Blarney had never a scratch.
11
CHAPTEE XII.
THE moon was throwing black shadows into the
deep cleft in the San Saba, where the Crockett
trail twisted along beside the swift-running rivu
let, that rose in the heart of the hills and bub
bled merrily away until lost in the westward val
ley and the brook that found its source at the
springs far out under the foot-hills towards the
Bravo. Slowly, wearily, warily, half a dozen
troopers on jaded horses were feeling their way
up the pass, a veteran corporal full thirty yards
ahead of his fellows leading on. "With the ad
vance rode an officer whose shoulder-straps, gleam
ing on the shell jacket sometimes worn in the
mounted service immediately after the war,
seemed almost too bright and new to accord with
the dust-grimed chevrons and trimmings of his
comrades. ISTew and brilliant, too, were the hilt
and scabbard of the sabre that dangled by his side.
New and "green" the men of his command had
believed him to be, in cavalry matters at least,
when first he joined them some weeks before, but
the most casehardened old customer among their
seasoned troopers had abandoned that view before
162
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
ever they started on this scout after a gang of
notorious outlaws, and now a new and very dif
ferent theory was grinding its way into their tired
brains, — that the "Doughboy Dragoon/' as they
had earlier dubbed him^ " Captain Gallyhad," as
one of them heard he was called, could give them
points in covering the front of a column that were
worth knowing, even if they had been learned in
a doughboy regiment and among the Sioux. It
would be a smart "Friday'' that managed to am
buscade old Brooks's column that cloudless, moon
lit, breezeless night, for, with that veteran's full
consent, as well as to his infinite relief, Captain
Barclay had himself gone forward with the ad
vance the moment they began to wind in among
the hills, and there at the post of danger he had
held his way, alert and vigilant, despite long hours
in saddle that had told heavily on more than half
the command, calm and brave despite the fact
that their welcome to the westward portal of the
Pass was the sight of poor Blarney running to
them for shelter, sympathy, and companionship,
covered with the blood of his beloved rider.
And what was that rider's fate? It was now
almost eleven o'clock, and no man knew. Only
briefly had they halted and flocked about the
panting steed, for stern was the need that held
them to their course. "With awe-stricken faces
1(54 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
and compressed lips they looked into each other's
eyes, as though to ask, What next? Who next?
The major, tender-hearted as a woman, well-nigh
choked with distress and anxiety as he turned to
Barclay for counsel; and long before the rear
most of the column had reached the spot the de
cision had been made. The leaders were again
pushing on. Young Brayton, with half a dozen
troopers, had been despatched southwestward
along the falda, ordered to search high and low
for Lawrence, dead or alive. There was only
one theory, — that, pushing eagerly ahead to the
relief of Cramer's crippled troop, the gallant ex-
captain had taken no thought of personal danger;
the old instinct of leadership had possessed him,
and, foremost of his little squad, he had been
picked off by lurking bushwackers of the outlaws,
crouching like Indians in the shelter of the rocks,
and had fallen another victim of their desperado
efforts. "One more fight in Texas," indeed.
Poor, brave, warm-hearted Ned! That one more
fight, reported in Washington by an indulgent
department commander, might bring about im
mediate measures for his restoration to the army;
but was it worth the risk? Was it worth what
might befall those motherless children, praying
for father hour after hour that livelong day1?
Should it have been permitted, had there been
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
any one to prevent, in view of the fact that no
longer was there soldier duty to lead him on?
The government had released him from all that,
had bidden him go. It had no further use for the
services of such as he; it had turned him loose
upon the world, with heavy stoppages against the
stipulated bonus. " Oh, what right had he," cried
Brooks, "to forget those babies back at Worth,
well knowing as he must that no man's life is
worth a hair in front of the rifles of that outlaw
gang, much less an enemy such as Lawrence has
shown himself to be?" The major's heart and
head were heavy as once more the order forwajd
was given. With every inclination to turn from
his course with. his entire command, to hasten in
search of Lawrence's little party and Cramer's
halted men, he well knew that should the pay
master and his precious thousands fall into the
outlaw hands of the Friday gang he would be
held responsible, even though San Saba's canton
ment sent with him a force of forty men.
Once within the jaws of the Pass, the little de
tachment had closed on the head of column, the
advance guard, Barclay's leading section, riding
on and dispersing itself under his instructions,
while Brooks held the other sections until Winn's
men were all closed up, bringing with them the
little squads that had scouted towards the short
166 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
cut of the San Saba and had found no living
soul in sight, yet had followed fresh hoof-tracks
coming their way for miles. Whoever they were,
the scouts of the gang were well ahead; whoever
he was, "Friday77 by this time knew the troops
were coming. Then, with the flankers scouring
the slopes well out to right and left wherever
possible, Brooks's main body too had entered the
winding defile and was lost in the bowels of the
earth.
At eleven o'clock a watcher, gazing back into
the broad shallow depression in which lay Crock
ett's, and then northward to the low-lying hills
along the trail to Worth, could have seen no
gleam of light far or near that would speak of
human habitation or life or movement, no sign,
in fact, of life of any kind ; yet no sooner was the
last shadowy form of horse and trooper swallowed
up in the black gloom of the defile, no sooner had
the last faint click of iron-shod hoofs died away
in the hidden distance, than there slowly rose
from behind the shelter of a clump of rocks, far
out to the right of the trail, a crouching figure
that went almost on all-fours to the edge of the
rivulet, slunk away down the bank, dodging
swiftly, softly, from boulder to boulder, until it
disappeared around a little shoulder of bluff five
hundred yards away, was lost to view a moment,
A TIfOOPER GALAHAD. 167
then reissued into the moonlight, this time in
saddle, swinging, cowboy fashion, a riata about
its head as it rode. Spinning up the slopes and
out of the stream-bed, away it went, careering up
the billowy rise to the south, and was presently
lost to view a second time behind some castellated
rocks along the crest. Three minutes more, and
these began to glow along their eastward face with
the light of some unseen fire that flared for per
haps a minute somewhere about the hidden base
of the group, and then, far away to the southeast,
far out among the buttes and knolls in the heart
of the range, there was a sudden flash of brilliant
light, just as though some one had touched off in
front of a reflector a pound or so of rifle powder.
The hills for one second were lighted up, then as
suddenly relapsed into gloom. The blaze at the
ledge so close at hand was promptly doused, and
the night rolled on, calm, placid, and unbroken.
When the first streak of dawn crept into the
orient sky, Barclay's shadowy scouts were issuing
from the San Saba on the farther side and halt
ing for the coming of the main body. Neither
those who led the advance nor those out on either
flank, where flankers were at all possible, had seen
a sign of outlaw, cowboy, even of human being,
outside their own array. ISTot only had the Fri
day gang vanished from the neighborhood of the
168 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
Pass, but, what was most mysterious, not a sign
had appeared of paymaster or escort, who were
due at Crockett's early this very morning.
Brooks, picking out the lightest rider in his weary
column, sent him on the liveliest horse to warn
Pennywise and his escort, provided he could find
him at the San Saba camp, of what had taken
place, notify him that they would here await his
coming, and meantime ordered dismount, unsad
dle, and graze, and in two minutes every charger
was divested of his load, and many of them were
kicking and rolling on the turf.
Twenty-four hours had the command been in
saddle, except for the required halts and a long
two hours during the dead of night, when leading
their wearied steeds or crouching beside them at
rest, while Barclay and his scouts explored the
overhanging heights and listened eagerly for
sound of coming troopers from the eastward. But
for the waning moon there would have been hours
of total darkness. Ninety miles, all told, had
they travelled, and now, wearied though they
were, nine out of ten of the men were chafing
with wrath that the wily gang had managed to
escape them. Whither were they gone, and
where on earth was the paymaster, were the ques
tions. Certainly not through the Pass, for there
were no fresh hoof-prints. Could it be that,
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
balked in their plan to overwhelm the escort by
this coming of at least an equal force, the gang
had turned back angered and thrown themselves
on Cramer's crippled party with the view of get
ting away with the horses, arms, and equipments ?
Certainly none of Cramer's people had made their
way by the game trails over the range to join
them, but there was reason for that: Lawrence
had never succeeded in reaching Cramer.
Sad, wearied, and depressed, Major Brooks
seated himself on a saddle-blanket to take counsel
with his officers, now reduced to three, — Barclay,
Winn, and the doctor. He missed Mullane,
stanch old fighter that he was, for Mullane knew
most of the country thoroughly, and had been
posted for months at the Rio San Saba, now only
some twenty miles to the east. He sorely missed
Lawrence, for on him he had often leaned. He
was beginning to take vast comfort in Barclay, to
be sure, but now Barclay, Winn, the doctor, men
and horses, the entire command, in fact, had
come to a stand-still. There was no use in going
farther east ; there the country was comparatively
open and rolling, and the gang would hardly dare
attack forty troopers on the wide prairie. Be
sides, the nearest water in that direction was
twenty miles away; the little rivulet rising in the
heart of the hills was ten miles behind them, and
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
already horses were thirsting and men emptying
their canteens. Blankly the major stared up into
Barclay's drawn and almost haggard face. " Can
you think of anything we ought to do?" he asked,
and, in asking, Brooks was a far better soldier
than the man who, having exhausted his own re
sources, thought it infra dig. to invite suggestions
from his juniors.
"Just one, sir. Sergeant McHugh tells me he
once came out here hunting with Captain Mul-
lane, and that they took a light spring wagon
right over the range southeast of Crockett's, the
way Cramer went. It is a much longer way
round, but a more open way. The trail must lie
some eight or ten miles off here to the south, or
west of south. Could it be that the gang only
started from the place of Cramer's ambuscade as
though to go to the Pass and then veered around
again and covered that trail, and for some reason
have been expecting the paymaster that way after
all?"
"Worn and weary as he was, Brooks staggered
to his feet at once, his face going paler still. " By
heaven, Barclay, if that's possible, they've had
uninterrupted hours in which to deal with Penny-
wise already! It is possible," he added, with
misery in the emphasis of his tone. " I remember
having heard of that trail, but never thought it
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
practicable for an ambulance. Then there is
work before us yet. Call Sergeant McHugh," he
cried. The word was passed among the wearied
groups, where, squatting or lying, the men had
thrown themselves upon the ground, and pres
ently, rubbing his red eyes, a stocky little Irish
sergeant came trudging up to his commander and
silently touched the visor of his worn old cap.
" Can you guide us by the shortest route from
here to the trail you spoke of to Captain Barclay?"
asked the major.
Mac turned and gazed away southwestward
along the line of the San Saba hills.
" I don't think we could miss it, sir, if we fol
lowed the foot-hills."
" Then we must try it," said Brooks, decidedly,
half turning to the silent officers as he spoke.
"Let the horses graze ten minutes more and get
all the dew and grass they can, then we'll push for
it."
And so, just before five, hungry, weary, and
weak, — some of the men at least, — the little
squadron clambered into saddle and once more
moved away. No need to leave any one to say
which way they'd gone; the trail showed all that.
Silently they headed for the broad valley of the
Bravo, miles away to the invisible west. Once
across a little rise in the falddj Brooks struck the
172 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
slow trot lie had learned long years before from
the beloved major of his old regiment, and dog
gedly the column took it up and followed. Not
a mile had they gone when the sun came peering
up over the heights far in their wake; for a few
minutes the dew flashed and sparkled on the turf
before it died beneath that fiery breath, and still
no man spoke. Sound sleep by night, a cold
plunge at dawn, and the hot tin of soldier coffee
send the morning tongues of a column en route
" wagging like sheep's tails," say the troopers, but
it takes a forced all-night march, following an all-
day ride, followed by a morning start without
either cold plunge or hot coffee, to stamp a column
with the silence of a Quaker meeting. Let no man
think, however, the fight is out of its heart, unless
he is suffering for a scrimmage on any terms.
Men wake up with a snap at sound of the first
shot; dull eyes flash in answer to the bugle chal
lenge, and worn and wearied troopers "take a
brace" that means mischief to the foe at the first
note that tells of trouble ahead. Just two miles
out there came the test to Brooks's men, and there
was none so poor as to be found wanting.
Two miles out, and the column woke up at the
cry, " Yon comes a courier I" and coming he was,
" hell to split," said Sergeant McHugh, from afar
off over the rolling prairie to the southwest. Five
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
minutes brought him within hail, — a corporal
from the camp on the Rio San Saba, on foaming
horse, who came tugging at both reins, sputtering
and plunging, up to the head of column, and
blurted out his news. "I thought you was the
escort, sir, — the paymaster's escort. They left
camp at nine last night, and at two this morning
Corporal Murphy got back, shot, and said they
were corralled in the hills on the old trail. The
captain is coming along with twenty men, and
sent me ahead. They must be ten miles from
here yet, sir."
"The paymaster, or the captain?" asked
Brooks, his heart beating hard, but his face im
perturbable.
"Both, sir, I reckon; one one way and the
other the other."
Then Brooks signalled over his shoulder.
"We've got to gallop, Barclay. It's neck or
nothing now." And some horses even then were
drooping at the trot.
Six o'clock now. Six miles from the eastward
mouth of the Pass, and spurs were plying here
and there throughout the column, for many found
their horses lagging sorely. Barclay on his
splendid blooded bay was far out to the front, the
corporal courier with him, for theirs were the
only mounts that could stand another forcing of
174 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
the pace. Rearward, three or four horses, ex
hausted, were being gathered up by a burly ser
geant, and with their weary riders led slowly
along the trail. Six-fifteen: — "Barclay and his
corporal were but dots along the falda now, and
moving swiftly. Then at a higher point, in plain
view, one dot began circling to the left at speed.
Every man knew what that meant, and the signal
was answered by another spurt. The sun was tell
ing at last. The dew had dried, but along the turf
there was but little dust to rise, and Brooks could
keep most of his men together. Far off to the
left, all eyes could see now the sign that told that
rival rescuers were gaining. The little squad
from the San Saba camp came spurring along the
beaten trail, betrayed by the cloud of dust that
rose above them. Young Connolly, the guidon-
bearer of Barclay's troop, unfurled his color and
set it flapping in the rising breeze in trooper chal
lenge; and down the column set and haggard
faces lighted up with the gleam of soldier joy.
It was to be a race, — a race to the rescue. Six-
thirty, and over a low ridge went Brooks and
"YVinn, close followed by their orderlies; far away,
midway up the opposite slope, stretched a slender,
twisting, traversing seam, — the winding trail to
Crockett's. The black dots in the lead were now
three in number, darting towards two others,
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 175
black dots, too, some four miles away and to the
right front, right in among the hills. "Keep it
up, lads! the quicker to water and rest!77 are the
major's words now, and spurs set home again,
despite equine grunts in protest. Six-forty, and
the dots in front are blacker and bigger and pop
ping about, three of them, at least, in lively mo
tion, checking suddenly, then darting to and fro,
and the cry bursts from the leader's lips, "By
God, they're at it! E"ow, lads, for all you're
worth, come on!" Six-forty-five, and, rounding
a projecting spur, a shoulder from the range,
Brooks, Winn, and the doctor burst in view of a
scene that banishes the last thought of weariness.
Barely a mile or so away, a rocky ledge lies be
yond and parallel with the trail. Its jagged crest
is spitting smoke and fire. Its smoother slopes,
towards the east, are dotted in places by the bodies
of dead or dying horses, and in places, too, by
other, smaller forms, apparently stiff and motion
less. Off the trail, as though dragged there by
affrighted and agonized animals, lies an over
turned ambulance, its six draught-mules out
stretched upon the turf about it ; so, too, are other
quadrupeds, troop-horses evidently. "Well back
of the ruined wagon, some trusty soul has rallied
the remaining troop-horses, while most of their
riders, sprawled upon the turf or behind impro-
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
vised rifle-pits, stick manfully to their duty.
"Friday's" ambuscade, in the still hours of the
night, has cost the government heavily in horses,
men, and mules, but old Pennywise's precious
safe is guarded still, and every rush the outlaws
make to get it is met by relentless fire. Six-fifty,
and, leaving on the field six outlawed forms that
will never fight again, the baffled relics of the
Fridays are scurrying away into the fastnesses of
the range before the labored rush and sputtering
fire of Brooks's men, and Galahad, with his cor
poral comrade, far in the lead, gets the last com
pliments of the departing gang. Another gallant
horse goes down, and Galahad's for the time goes
free, his rider falling fainting from exhaustion
and loss of blood.
CHAPTER XIII.
OLD Frazier's face was sad to see when, two
days later, all the harrowing details of that night's
work were received at Worth. Hours before, in
answer to courier from Crockett's, Dr. Collabone,
with steward, attendants, and such ambulances
as there were, had been put en route for the
Springs. Two other troops had been hurried to
the field, and Mrs. Blythe, with streaming eyes,
was straining to her heart two motherless chil
dren, now orphaned by that "one more square
fight in Texas." Gallant Ned Lawrence! Far
on the way to Cramer's bewildered force they
found his body, shot from ambush through and
through in two places. Yet, said his weeping
orderly, he had clung to the saddle nearly a mile.
Oh, the wrath at Department Head-Quarters and
along the line of posts and camps against that
gang, made up, as so many knew it must be made,
mainly of the thugs and deserters offscoured from
the army in days when moral character as vouched
for was no requisite before enlistment! Among
the dead upon the field was found the body of a
once trusted sergeant of Lawrence's troop; but
12 177
178 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
the other outlaws were Mexicans or jailbirds,
strange to the soldiers who turned them curiously
over. Pennywise, scared half to death and dread
fully shaken by the capsizing of his wagon, was
otherwise unscathed; his clerk was shot, his
driver sorely wounded; two of the San Saba es
cort were killed, and others hit. Brooks, with
Captain Haines from the San Saba, pushed on
until at noon he reached Cramer's people, now
reinforced by Fuller and his men and by the
shame-stricken Mullane. By nightfall his ex
hausted horses were drinking their fill from the
stream. The two wounded officers, Barclay and
Cramer, with half a dozen troopers, were being
made as comfortable as possible.
By dawn of the next day Mullane's pleading
had overpowered Brooks, whose heart was wrung
at the contemplation of such unrequited losses,
and, taking Lieutenant Winn and forty troopers
with him, the Irish captain, given a chance as he
prayed to redeem himself, marched away west
ward from the cantonment at Crockett's, bent on
overtaking the outlaws in the Apache mountains,
whither they had gone, burdened by half a dozen
wounded, so said the one prisoner, who, unable
to bear the torment of jolting along on horseback
with an arm bullet-smashed at the elbow, had
begged to be left behind. He was a mere boy,
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
whose elder brother had been for years a fugitive
from justice and of late a prominent member of
the gang, and it was by the side of that mortally
wounded ruffian they found the youngster weep
ing, more from grief than from pain, only a mile
away from the scene of the second ambuscade.
Verily the men who planned those death-traps
were masters of their villanous trade ! " Concen
trate all your first shots on the officers," were the
instructions; "get them down, and the men will
be helpless as sheep." Cramer, his doctor, and
his first sergeant had fallen at the first fire, and
that little command was paralyzed. Vigilant
bushwackers, schooled for years in Indian fight
ing, watching the Crockett trail against the
coming of other leaders, had easily recognized
Lawrence as he rode galloping on at the head of
his half-dozen, and the "one more square fight"
proved but a one-sided affair after all. Poor Ned
knew he had his death-wounds at the instant, yet
whipped out his revolver and ordered, "Charge!"
and charge they did upon the scattering, cowardly
crew that fled before them on their fresh horses
until the trooper leader tumbled from his saddle,
dead without a groan; and then, at safe distance,
his assassins turned and jeered their helpless pur
suers. How the veterans of " D" Troop clustered
about their old-time captain's lifeless form that
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
night, and, weary though they were after forty
hours of sleepless chase and scout and battle, im
plored the major to let them start at once upon
the outlaws' trail! The same tactics that had
halted Cramer's men and murdered Lawrence had
been played on the escort from San Saba. Bid-
dling the ambulance at the first volley, yet in the
dim moonlight missing the lieutenant command
ing, who happened to be riding at the moment on
the flank of his column instead of at the head, the
sudden volley felled a sergeant, but left the sub
altern full of fight, and he rallied his temporarily
stampeded troopers not four hundred yards away,
and charged back on the Fridays with a splendid
dash that drove them helter-skelter to the rocks.
Then, dismounting, he had stood them off su
perbly until rescue came.
Not for another forty-eight hours could old
Pennywise be induced to go on to Worth.
Though there was reassurance in the fact that the
Fridays were scattered over far Western Texas by
that time (some never stopping, as it turned out,
until safe from pursuit beyond the Bravo), the
veteran money-changer's nerve was sorely shaken.
He had not half the pluck of his punctured clerk,
who, though shot by a Henry rifle bullet through
the left arm and across the breast outside the ribs,
declared himself fit to take even a hot and feverish
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
drive and go with the payment. Fuller and his
ranchmen stuck manfully to that much desired
safe, and announced their intention of protecting
the paymaster at all hazards. The wounds of
Cramer and Barclay had been most skilfully
treated by the young doctor before Collabone
reached them; thanks to the perfect habits and
vigorous constitution of the latter, there was
nothing to prevent his transportation by easy
stages back to Worth at the end of the week, and
thither he seemed strangely eager to go. Thitner
they had borne the remains of poor Lawrence, and
there with all military honors had they buried all
that was mortal of the loved yet luckless comrade.
There, her own heart sorely wrung, Mrs. Blythe
was doing her utmost to comfort weeping Ada,
whose burly little brother was fortunately too
young to feel the desolation of their position.
But, flat on his back, Barclay had pencilled to the
loving-hearted woman a little note that bore her a
world of comfort, despite the suffering imposed
by a mandate to reveal its contents to no one but
her husband; for when a woman has news — good
news, great news — to tell, a husband falls far
short of the demands of the situation.
Barclay's wound had been dangerous at the
time, mainly because the bullet had grazed an
artery below the knee and brought on profuse
•j_g2 4 TROOPER GALAHAD.
bleeding that, unnoticed in the excitement of the
running fight, sapped him of his strength and
left him swooning; but Collabone and his assist
ant declared it healing perfectly and that not even
a limp would remain to betray It. One week
from the day of the spirited skirmish in which he
had played so prominent and gallant a part, Sir
Galahad was lifted into the ambulance and started
for Worth at the very moment the general com
manding the department was forwarding to Wash
ington his report of the affair, urgently recom
mending the bestowal of a brevet upon the new
captain of "D" Troop and a pension upon the
children of his whole-souled, hapless predecessor;
but, coupling his recommendations with ill-con
sidered yet natural reference to the injustice with
which Captain and Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel
Lawrence had been treated, he succeeded only in,
entombing the paper in some private pigeon-hole,
whence it was resurrected long months ^after, too
late to be of use.
After the manner of the army, the garrison at
Worth had ceased all outward sign of mourning
by the time Barclay reached the post, and almost
everybody was ready to devote himself or her
self to the amelioration of his condition. Mrs.
Frazier, with a motherly eye to business, had
lost no time in urging upon her liege the pro-
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
priety — indeed, the imperative necessity — of
his riding out to meet the wounded officer and
moving him at once under the shelter of their
roof. Amanda could and should give up he*-
room (she was only too glad to), and the girls
could sleep together; then the mother and daugh
ters would have sole charge of the nursing of this
most eligible young man. What might not be
accomplished by such a matron and such dear
girls under such exceptional circumstances? In
deed, Frazier was given to understand that he
must do it, for if Barclay was allowed to return
to his own quarters right next door to the Whins'
— and Mr. Winn away — who could say what
couldn't be said? — what wouldn't be said?
"Everybody knew that Laura Winn had been
doing her best," said Mrs. Frazier, "to reset
her nets and lure her whilom lover within the
meshes," and this would give her opportunities
immeasurable. Frazier had a sleepless night of
it. He could not combat his wife's theories,
though he would not admit the truth of all she
asserted. "But," said he, "everybody will see
through the scheme at a glance."
"I don't care if they do. I don't care what
they say," said his energetic and strategic spouse.
"The end justifies the means. Something must
be done for the girls you've buried out here in
184 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
this wilderness. As for Laura "Winn, better a
sneer at my precautions than a scandal for lack
of them."
But Frazier remonstrated: "Barclay isn't the
man to get mixed up in a scandal/7 said he.
"But Laura Winn wouldn't flinch at it," said
she, "and it's the way the woman acts — not the
man — that sets people talking;" wherein was
Mrs. Frazier schooled beyond the sphere in which
she moved. At her bidding, Frazier sent for
young Brayton, who had marched back with the
detachment not sent in chase, told him of Mrs.
Frazier' s benevolent plans for his captain's com
fort, and suggested that such of Barclay's things
as he might need be sent over beforehand, — "so
as to have everything ready, you know."
The youngster looked embarrassed, said he
would attend to it, but immediately sought Major
Brooks, who was doing a good deal of resting at
the time. " What am I to say to Colonel Frazier,
sir?" he asked. "The colonel tells me Mrs. Fra
zier has a room all ready for Captain Barclay and
wishes me to send over a lot of things, and I have
a message from the captain saying he will proba
bly arrive day after to-morrow and to have his
room ready; and, he adds, in case any one plans
to put him elsewhere, to decline in his name."
"Oh, wise young judge!" growled Brooks to
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 135
himself. Every day was adding to his respect for
Galahad.
"I can't decline the commanding officer's invi
tation, can I, sir?" asked Brayton, in conclusion.
"No, you can't with safety," said the major,
" but I'll speak to Collabone— No," he added,
abruptly, as he reflected that Mrs. Frazier might
eventually hear of it, Collabone being a man who
knew no guile and told everybody anything he
knew. "No. You tell Collabone what the cap
tain wishes, and let him fix it." And so between
the three it was arranged, through the couriers at
that time going back and forth every day, that
Barclay should be notified of the honor in store
for him. And notified he was, and gravely passed
the letter over to ^Esculapius Junior.
" Help me out of this, doctor, in some way," he
said. "I wish to be nobody's guest." And so,
when old Frazier did actually mount a horse and,
with Amanda in a stylish habit beaming at his
side, did actually ride forth — the first time he'd
been in saddle in a year — and meet Barclay's am
bulance full a thousand yards out from the post,
and bade him thrice welcome to the room they
had prepared for him, Barclay beamed back his
thanks and appreciations, and bade the colonel
believe he would never forget his kindness and
Mrs. Frazier's, but that he had every possible com-
186 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
fort awaiting him at his own quarters, and could
never consent to incommoding Mrs. Frazier or
the young ladies. Indeed, the doctor had made
other and very different plans for him, — as in
deed the doctor had. And Frazier rode back
vaguely relieved, yet crestfallen. He knew Bar
clay and the doctor were right. He knew he
himself shrank from such throwing of his daugh
ters at a fellow's head ; and then he quailed at the
thought of Mrs. Frazier's upbraidings, for she,
honest woman, felt it a mother's duty to provide
for her precious lambs, the more so because their
father was so culpably indifferent, if not shame
fully negligent.
A balked and angered woman was Mrs. Frazier
at the captain's politely veiled refusal to come and
be nursed and captured under her roof. Tartaric
acid tinged the smiles of her innocent children
the next few days, and if ever there was a time
when it behooved Laura Winn to be on her guard
and behave with the utmost reserve as regarded
her next-door neighbor, it was here and now. She
could have read the danger signal in the Fraziers'
greeting at parade that very evening, as, most be
comingly attired, she strolled languidly down the
line at the side of ^sculapius Junior, who, after
seeing his patient comfortably stowed in bed,
came forth to find her on the piazza, full of sym-
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
pathetic interest and eager to know what she
could do or make or have made in the way of ap
petizing dainties for the sufferer. Nor did she
let him free until he found refuge in the midst
of the deeply interested group in front of the
colonel's quarters.
This was Tuesday evening, and only Brooks,
Blythe, and Brayton were permitted to intrude
upon the invalid after the long hours' trundle
over the prairie roads. On the morrow the pay
master was to take his ambulance, escort, and
emptied safe on the back track to Crockett's, and
Barclay was to be allowed to see Mrs. Blythe;
but, for the night, rest and quiet were enjoined.
In answer to his queries, he was told that the
latest news reported Mullane, "Winn, and Bral-
ligan scouring the Apache range, while Captain
Haight, with forty men, was patrolling towards
the Bravo. The post was flush with money. Pul
ler's bar was doing a rousing business, and Lieu
tenant Trott, guarding the stores turned over by
Winn, was wondering when and in what shape
the money value of the stores not turned over was
to be paid to him, for the time was past, Winn
was far, far away, no package of money had come
for him, and Mrs. Winn calmly said it was no
affair of hers and she had no knowledge when or
by what hand it would be forthcoming. It .was
188 & TROOPER GALAHAD.
conceded at Worth that, in view of tEe danger in
which her husband stood, both afield and at home,
more anxiety and less adornment would better
have become the lady, as she outshone all other
women present when the line of infantry officers
broke ranks at dismissal of parade.
CHAPTER XIV.
A WEEK rolled by, a week little Jim Lawrence
and other small boys long remembered for the
good things they had to eat and drink; and now
Galahad was sitting up again at his quarters, do
ing very well, said both doctors, so well that he
could be out on the shaded piazza in a reclining
chair, said Brayton, — but wouldn't, said Blythe,
— and for good reasons, said the Fraziers fem
inine, " because then there'd be no dodging Laura
Winn, if, indeed, he has succeeded thus far."
True, he had not ventured outside his doors, an5
no one had seen her venture within them. True,
Mrs. Frazier, Mrs. Blythe, and other motherly
women had been to visit him, — Mrs. Frazier fre
quently, — and Mrs. Winn had been most particu
lar in her daily inquiries, — "most persistent,"
said the Frazier girls. Those were days in which
milk was a luxury in far-away Texas, but the deli
cate custards, whips, creams, and what the colo
nel's Hibernian orderly described as "floating
Irelands," which that messenger bore with Mrs.
Frazier7 s love, or Miss Frazier's compliments, or
Miss 'Manda Frazier' s regards and hopes that the
189
190 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
captain was better this morning, could be num
bered only by tHe passing days. What Mrs. Fra-
zier was prepared to see or hear of was similar
attention on the part of Mrs. Winn; but Mrs.
Winn's attentions took a form more difficult to
see, and, even in a frontier, old-time garrison, to
hear of.
What Mrs. Frazier was not prepared to see was
Mrs. Blythe in frequent confidential chat with
the officer whom the colonel's wife chose to con
sider her own invalid. She had always fancied
Mrs. Blythe before, but now she met her with
that indescribable tone suggestive of unmerited
yet meekly, womanfully borne injury, which is
so superior to either explanation or resentment.
Mrs. Winn was frequently on her piazza chatting
with Mr. Bray ton or Dr. "Funnybone," as the
wits of the post had designated Collabone's right
bower, "who has more brains in one head/7 said
Collabone, "than the mess has in ten;" but she
greeted Mrs. Frazier with an austere and distant
dignity even more pronounced than Mrs. Frazier's
manner to Mrs. Blythe, which plainly showed
that Laura had not "been raised in the army for
nothing," and that she had a will and temper and
pluck that would brook no airs and tolerate no
aspersions on Mrs. Frazier's part. Aspersions
there had been, for her friend Mrs. Faulkner had
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
not failed in that sisterly duty which so many
women so reluctantly yet faithfully perform, and
everything Mrs. and the Misses Frazier had even
hinted, and some things they even hadn't, were
duly conveyed to Laura's ears. She was angered
at the Fraziers for daring to say such things, at
Mrs. Faulkner for daring to repeat them, and at
Barclay for daring to keep her beyond the possi
bility of their being true. Never before had she
known what it was to strive for a look or word of
admiration and to meet utter indifference. Yet
those blue eyes of Barclay's had once fairly
burned with passionate delight in her girlish
beauty, and his words had trembled with their
weight of love for her. ~No other woman, she
believed, had yet come into his life and banished
all memory of her; and, now that her beauty was
but the riper for her years, she rebelled in her
soul against the whisper that it could no longer
move him.
Wedded though she was to Harry Winn, loving
him after the fashion of her shallow nature so
long as there was no man at the post from whom
she sought to exact homage, she had time and
again within the year felt towards her husband a
sense of injury. What business had he had to
woo her if he was so poor? What right had he
to subject her to the annoyance of dunning let-
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
ters, of suggestive inquiries on the part of her
neighbors? Why should she submit to parsimo
nious skimping and cheese-paring, to living with
only one servant when several other women had
two, to all the little shifts and meannesses poor
Harry had declared to be necessary? It was his
business to provide for her needs. Her father
had always supported her in style; why couldn't
Harry do the same? True, she knew when she
married him he had nothing but his pay. He
told her everything, but she had never taken
thought for the morrow, though she had taken
perhaps too much thought of what she should
wear or eat or drink. Laura loved the good things
of this life, and had been freely indulged through
out her petted girlhood; and now, in the days
when every woman seemed turning against her,
purse, cellar, and larder were empty and her hus
band gone on a stupid foray to the mountains.
None could say when he would return, or what
new sorrow would meet him then. Other men
managed to earn money or make money some
how outside their pay. "Why should sh'e, whose
tastes, she said, were so much more refined, be
mated with one who could only spend?
There is a time when many a homely face be
comes radiant with a beauty too deep for sallow
skin or heavy features to hide, and when a really
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
winsome face becomes well-nigh angelic; but,
even as Laura Winn bent over her sleeping child
or nestled the unconscious little one in her bosom,
the sullen fire of discontent, thwarted ambition,
and wounded self-love smouldered in her deep,
slumberous eyes. There were hours now when
Baby Winn was left to the scant care of the
household nurse, while the mother took the air
upon the piazza during the day or flitted about
from parlor to parlor along the row at night. She
was restless, nervous, as all could see. She fre
quently assailed Brayton with queries for news,
always decorously asking first if couriers had come
or were expected from the command afield, yet
speedily coming back to the real object of her
constant thoughts, the now much honored officer,
her next-door neighbor. For three days after he
was pronounced able to sit up she did not succeed
in seeing him at all, though so many other and,
it should be explained, much older women did;
but that did not abate one whit her determination
that he should speedily see her.
Just what her object was she herself could not
have told. It was an instinct, an impulse, a whim,
perhaps; but he who had been her lover and was
rejected had dared to gaze into her face with eyes
serene and untroubled, had met her but half-
veiled references to old days with polite but posi-
13
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
tive indifference. She had nothing to ask of him,
she told herself; she meant no disloyalty to
Harry, no wrong of any kind. Not a bit of it!
She had treated Barclay very badly. She had
done him a wrong that was much greater in her
own estimation than it was in that of any one of
her neighbors, among whom the women, at least,
considered the loss of his inamorata a blessing in
disguise; but Laura fully believed that Barclay's
heart must have been crushed in the depth of his
woe, and that it was now her duty to make friends
again, — perhaps in some way to console him; not,
of course, in any way to which Harry could ob
ject, not, of course, in any way to which the post
ought to object, but — well, even to herself, as has
been said, she could not entirely and satisfactorily
explain her motives; it was impossible, therefore,
that she could hope to do so to anybody else; and
yet she had dared to write to him. It was only
a little note, and yet, with all its inconsistencies,
it said so much:
"DEAR CAPTAIN BARCLAY, — I cannot tell you
my distress at hearing of your again being se
verely wounded, especially at a time when I had
hoped to have you meet and better know my hus
band, but now in his distressing absence I, who
more than any woman at this post am anxious to
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
show my sympathy and sorrow, am practically
helpless. Do tell me if there is anything I can
do, — though I am sure I can't see what is left for
me, with no cook or kitchen, and Mrs. Frazier and
the Misses Frazier sending such loads of things.
I really envy them and Mrs. Blythe the privilege
of their years in going to see you personally, for
am I not at least
" Your oldest friend, " L. W."
This ingenuous note was sent by Hannibal at
an hour when the captain was alone, and when,
had he been disposed, he might have hobbled to
the door and answered in person; but hobble he
did not, nor did he answer until after long
thought. He received the little missive with sur
prise, read it without a tremor of hand or lip, but
with something of shame and pity that overspread
his face like a cloud. Was he only just beginning
to know her, after all ?
"Pray do not give my scratch a thought," he
answered, in writing, late that afternoon, "and
believe, my dear Mrs. Winn, that I have every
comfort that one can possibly desire. Every one
is most kind. I expect to be out with my men in
a week, and shall be delighted to take the field
and send Mr. Winn back to you forthwith.
"Most sincerely."
196 A TROOPER GALAHAD,
And that was how, with polite but positive in
difference, he had treated her reference to old
times and old friends. Shallow as she was, Laura
Winn was deep enough to see that he meant to
hold himself far aloof from her. He could hardly
have told her more plainly he would have none
of her. He had even dared to say it would be
a pleasure to go, that he might send her husband
back to her arms. And this was the man she once
thought she loved, the man who, she believed,
adored her and would never outlive the passion
of his sorrow at losing her!
Even now the foolish heart of the woman might
have accepted its lesson; but it was time for
friends again to come, and, as Laura expressed it,
"pry and prod and preach," and that brought on
a climax.
Mrs. Faulkner had dropped in and dropped out
again, and Laura, who seemed forever going to
the porch these days, followed and called her
back.
" One thing you said I don't understand," she
began, and Mrs. Faulkner's pretty face showed
plainly there had been something of a storm.
" I said this, Laura," her friend responded, per
mitting her to go no further, but turning at the
step and looking up into her indignant eyes.
"You do yourself injury by showing such con-
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
cern about Captain Barclay. Everybody says so,
and it's all wasted as far as lie's concerned. He
never notices your messages in any way."
It was galling to feel herself censured or criti
cised, but Mrs. Winn was becoming used to that.
It was worse than galling to be told that her
whilom lover now turned from her almost with
contempt. She could bear it that they should
say that Galahad Barclay was again circling
within danger of her fascinations and would
speedily find himself powerless to resist. She
could not bear it that they should declare him
dead to her. The anger ablaze in her eyes and
flushing her cheeks was something even Mrs.
Faulkner had never seen before. It was as though
she had roused some almost tigerish trait. For
a moment Laura stood glaring at her visitor, one
hand nervously clutching at the balcony rail, the
other at the snugly buttoned bodice of her dark
gown. At that instant the door of Barclay's
quarters opened and the sound of glad voices pre
ceded but a second or two the appearance of
feminine drapery at the threshold. Mrs. Brooks
came backing into view, chatting volubly with
some one still invisible. Mrs. Frazier came
sidling after, and then as they reached the open
air the deep tones of their invalid host were heard
mingling with the lighter, shriller, if not exactly
198 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
silvery accents of his visitors. One glance they
threw towards the young matron at the opposite
end of the piazza, and then it seemed as though
Mrs. Frazier promptly precipitated herself into
the doorway again, as though to block it against
Barclay's possible egress. "Determined not to
let him see me, nor me him," were the unspoken
words that flashed through Laura's thoughts.
Some devil of mischief seemed to whisper in her
ear, for when Mrs. Faulkner turned again, there
stood her hostess holding forth for her inspection
a little note addressed to Mrs. H. H. Winn in a
hand Mrs. Faulkner recognized at once as that
of Barclay. With an icy sneer the irate lady
spoke :
" You think he doesn't write. This came only
an hour ago."
Not five minutes later Mrs. Frazier turned to
Mrs. Faulkner and asked, "What was Laura
Winn showing you? — a letter?"
Mrs. Blythe was passing at the moment, Ada
Lawrence, a tall, pallid slip of a girl, in her first
black dress, walking sadly at her side. Mrs.
Faulkner nodded assent to the question, but
glanced significantly at the passers-by, on their
way seemingly to the house the elders had just
left. Mrs. Blythe bowed courteously and smiled,
but the smile was one of those half-hearted at-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. ^99
tempts that seemed to wither instantly at Mrs.
Frazier's solemn and distant salutation.
"Now what's that woman taking Ada Law
rence there for?" was Mrs. Frazier's query the
instant the two were out of earshot, and for the
moment she forgot the letter and the significant
glance in Mrs. Faulkner's eyes. But Mrs. Brooks
had not, and no sooner had the door of Barclay's
quarters opened and swallowed up the new callers
than the major's wife turned back to it.
"You don't mean a letter from — him?" she
asked, with a nod of the head at Barclay's quar
ters.
" I didn't mean to say anything about it," said
Mrs. Faulkner, with proper hesitation, "but you
seem to know as much as I do, and she made no
secret of it whatever. Indeed, I don't know that
there's anything in it that anybody mightn't see."
"I think she has no business whatever receiv
ing letters now that her husband's away — nor any
other time, for that matter," said Mrs. Frazier,
hotly; "and I mean to tell her so; and I'm as
tonished at him."
"For heaven's sake don't tell her I let it out!"
exclaimed Mrs. Faulkner. "You've just got to
say you saw it away from his door."
"Well, I think the sooner Mr. Harry Winn
gets back the better it will be for this garrison,
200 A- TROOPER GALAHAD.
and I'll say so to Colonel Frazier this very night/'
exclaimed the colonel's wife, bristling with proper
indignation. "And he'll come back, if we have
to send couriers to order him."
But no courier was needed to summon Lieu
tenant Winn. Two days later, fast as jaded horse
could carry him, followed by a single orderly, he
was coming, full of hope and pluck and enthu
siasm, the bearer of tidings that meant so much
to him, that might be of such weight in the re
moval of some portion, at least, of the serious
stoppages against his pay. Away out in the
Apache mountains, where the remnants of the
Friday gang seemed to have scattered into little
squads of two or three, one party had been trailed
and chased to its hole, a wild nook in the rocks,
and there in brief, bloody fight two more of the
gang bit the dust in reaching that height of
outlaw ambition, "dying with their boots on,"
Others were wounded and captured, and still
another, neither wounded nor combatant, but a
trembling skulker, was dragged out from a cleft
in among the boulders and kicked into the pres
ence of the commanding officer by a burly Irish
man who would have lost the bliss of a dozen
pay-day sprees rather than that one achievement,
for the skulking captive was Marsden, and Mars-
den was English.
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 20 1
A more abject, pitiable, helpless wretch even
Texan troopers had never seen. Imploring his
captors to protect him against the illimitable pos
sibilities of lynch law, — for there were veteran
soldiers present to whose thinking drum-head
court-martial and summary execution were all too
good for Marsden, — the ex-sergeant told the
story of his stealings, and the names of his accom
plices, but declared that all his ill-gotten gains
were gone. Every cent he had at the time of
his flight was taken from him, he protested, by the
gang of desperadoes among whom he had found
refuge.
"He's lyin', sorr," declared Sergeant Shaugh-
nessy at this juncture. " He's hidin' the hoith av
it somewheres, an' there's nothin' like the noose
av a lariat to frishen his mimory." But old Mul-
lane ordered silence.
" Go you back to Worth fast as you can," said
he to Winn. "Write the report for me to sign
before you start. Tell the colonel where what is
left of the stolen property can be found, and we'll
bring Marsden along with us. The quicker you
get there the more you can save."
Worth was one hundred and fifty miles away
on a bee-line, and Winn had to twist and turn,
but he rode with buoyant heart. By prompt
measures much of his misfortune might be wiped
202 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
out. Then, with the proffered loan with which to
settle his accounts and pay off certain pressing
creditors, he could start afresh, his head at last
above the waters that had weighed him down.
He would lead a simple, inexpensive life, and
Laura would have to help him. He could set
aside one-fourth, or even, perhaps, one-third, of
his pay to send each month to the bank at San
Antonio. It would be hard, but at least he would
be honest and manful, and Laura would have to
try to dress and live inexpensively. She used to
say she would rather share exile and poverty with
him than a palace wyith any other man, but that
seemed a bit like hyperbole in the light of her
subsequent career. Long before this, he said, the
bank would have sent the money to "Worth. It
was doubtless now awaiting him in Fuller's safe,
or possibly Trott's. How blessed a thing it was
that the cashier should have been an old and
warm friend of his father, — that he should have
written proffering aid for old times' sake to the
son of the soldier he had known and been aided
by and had learned to love in bygone days! It
was odd that Mr. Cashier Bolton had not made
himself known to him, Harry Winn, when he
and his lovely bride were in San Antonio, but all
the more was the offer appreciated. It was odd
that he should couple with the offer a condition
A TROOPER GALAHAD. £03
that Winn should give his word not to tell the
name of his father's friend and his own bene
factor, and further to agree neither to drink any
intoxicant nor bet a cent on any game of chance
until the money was repaid. He was not given
to drinking, but he had heard of a fondness on
his father's part for cards, and had felt the fas
cination himself. All right: he would promise
gladly.
They got fresh horses at a midway camp where
a small detachment guarded the Cougar Springs,
rested during the hot hours of the first day after
a long night ride, then set forth, chasing their
long shadows in the late afternoon, and, riding on
through the night, hove in sight of the twinkling
lights in the company kitchens at Worth just as
the dawn was spreading over the eastward prairie.
At the guard-house, aroused by the sentry's warn
ing, a sergeant tumbled off his bench and ran
sleepily out to meet them. It was a man whom
"Winn had frequently seen hovering about his
quarters in attendance upon their maid-of-all-
work.
"All well at home, Quigley?" he queried, hope-
fully.
"All well, sir; leastwise Mrs. "Winn and the
baby is, so Miss Purdy said yesterday evenin'.
Mrs. Blythe with her children and Colonel Law-
204 & TROOPER GALAHAD.
rence's have gone to San Antonio. They're all
goin' home together. Any luck, sir?"
"I should say so! Hit 'em hard twice, and
caught Marsden alive."
" Great Beg pardon, lieutenant, but that's
the best news yet!" The soldier's eyes danced
and pleaded for more, but Winn was eager to
reach home, to tiptoe up to Laura's room, to kneel
by the bedside and fold her, waking, in his strong,
yearning arms, to bend and kiss his baby's sleep
ing face. He spurred on across the parade. The
long, low line of officers' quarters lay black and
unrelieved against the reddening sky. Only in
one or two were faint night-lights burning, one
down near the southern end, the room of the offi
cer of the day, another in his own. The slats of
the blinds, half turned, revealed the glimmer of a
lamp within. Probably baby was awake and de
manding entertainment, and there could be no
surprising Laura as he had planned. Still, he
guided his horse so as to avoid pebbles or any
thing that would click against the shod hoofs.
The home-coming would be the sweeter for its
being unheralded.
"Never mind the saddle-bags now," he mur
mured to his orderly. "Take the horses to
stables, and bring the traps over by and by."
Then he tiptoed around to the back of the house.
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 205
The front door, he knew, would be locked; so
would that opening on the little gallery in rear;
but there was the window of his den; he could
easily raise it from outside and let himself in
without any one's being the wiser. A glance at
his watch showed him that in ten minutes the
morning gun would fire and the post wake up to
the shrill reveille of the infantry fifes and drums.
Even though Laura should be awake and up with
her baby, the surprise might be attempted. The
back porch was lighted up with the glow from
the east. The back door of the Barclay-Brayton
establishment was ajar, and some one was moving
about in the kitchen, — Hannibal, probably, get
ting coffee for his master in time for morning
stables. Just to try it, "Winn tiptoed up the low
steps to the rear door, and there it stood, not wide
open, but just ajar. "Miss Purdy" had mended
her ways, then, and was rising betimes, he said.
Softly entering, he passed through the little
kitchen into the dark dining-room beyond, felt
his way through into his deserted den to the left,
— the blinds were tightly closed, — thence to the
narrow hall, and up the carpeted, creaking stairs.
The door of the back room at the east, the nur
sery, was right at the landing. The light of the
dawn was strong enough to reveal dimly objects
within. That door, too, was wide open, and there
206 A- TROOPER GALAHAD.
by the bedside was the cradle of his baby, and
the little one placidly asleep. There in her bed,
innocent of the possibility of masculine observa
tion, her ears closed, her mouth wide open in the
stupor of sleep, lay the domestic combination of
nurse and maid-of-all-work. He tiptoed past the
door and softly approached that of the front, the
westward room, — his and Laura's. It, too, was
partly open. A lamp burned dimly on the bu
reau. The broad, white bed, with its tumbled
pillows and tossed-back coverlet, was empty, as
he found the room to be. Laura, then, and not
the maid, was the early riser. Softly he searched
about the upper floor. She had heard him, after
all, and was hiding somewhere to tease him. No;
there on the back of her rocking-chair hung the
pink, beribboned wrapper that was so becoming
to her, and on another the dainty, lace-trimmed
night-robe. She must be up and dressed, — his
languid, lazy Laura, who rarely rose before nine
o'clock, as a rule, and now it was only five. A
strange throbbing began at his heart. Quickly
he turned and scurried down the stairs, struck a
match in the parlor, another in the dining-room.
Both were empty. The den and its closets were
explored. No one there.
Out he went through the kitchen to the east
ward porch again. The light was stronger. Over
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 207
the level mesa to the edge of the bluff, not fifty
yards away, his eager eyes swept in search of the
truant form. There stood at the very brow of
the projecting point at the northeast side a little,
latticed summer-house where sentimental couples
sometimes sat and looked over the shallow valley
of moonlight nights; and there, close beside it,
switching the skirt of her stylish riding-habit with
her whip, stood Laura Winn. Just as she turned
and glanced impatiently over her shoulder, out
from the adjoining door came a soldierly form in
riding-dress. For an instant three forms seemed
to stand stock-still; then came the shock and roar
of the reveille gun, and before the echoes rolled
away Lieutenant Winn, striding up to Barclay
with fury in his eyes, struck the captain full in
the face and sent him crashing over a kitchen
chair.
CHAPTEK XV.
TEN miles out to the northwest the stream that
curved and twisted around the low mesa of Fort
Worth burst its way through a ridge in the foot
hills, and, brawling and dashing at its rocky
banks, rolled out over the lowlands, 'foaming at
the mouth with the violence of its own struggles.
Far in the heart of the hills it had its source in
several clear, cold springs, while the deep hoarded
snows of the harsh winters fed and swelled it in
the springtide until it reached the proportions of
a short-lived torrent. Huge heaps of uprooted
trees and tangled brushwood it deposited along
its shores as far down even as the fort, but nothing
was carried below the sutler's. "Ahl's fish that
comes to Fuller's net," said Sergeant McHugh,
" an' sorra a sliver av a sardine iver got away from
it." Once in a while, after unusual flood, the
flotsam and jetsam of the creek would be diversi
fied with wagon-bodies, ranch roofs, camp equi
page, and the like, for "the Eange," as this odd
upheaval was locally termed, was a famous place
for prospectors.
A beautiful stream was tEe Blanca within its
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 209
mountain gates, but an ashen pallor overspread
it after its fight for freedom. It was never the
same stream after it got away. It danced and
sparkled past pretty nooks and shaded ravines
among the hills, but issued from the gateway,
like the far-famed Stinking Kiver of the Ban
nocks and Shoshones of Northwestern Wyoming,
a metamorphosed stream. It had a bad reputa
tion. It was solely 'responsible for the fact that
Worth had been located away out here in the
bald, bleak, open prairie country, instead of
among those bold and beautiful heights to the
northwest. "The very spot for a military post I"
said the officers of the earlier scouting parties, as
they camped within the gates in the midst of a
lonely glade. "Lovely," said the Texan guides,
in reply, "so long as you don't mind being
drowned out every spring." It seems that snows
would melt of a sudden, tremendous thunder
storms burst among the crags, and flood and de
luge the valleys, for the Blanca could not with
sufficient swiftness discharge its swollen torrents
through that narrow gorge. Beautiful it lay,
ordinarily, as a summer sea, and the bridle-path
that wound through the pass was a favorite route
for picnic-parties from Worth. But storm-clouds
would rise and turn summer seas to raging water-
demons, and then the flood that tore through the
14
210 4 TROOPER GALAHAD.
gates would sweep all before it, like the unloosed
waters of the Conemaugh that awful May of '89.
From Worth to the White Gate the prairie road
wound hard and firm, and before the late excite
ment several picnic-, riding-, and driving-parties
had paid their spring-time visits. It was quite the
thing, too, for such maids and matrons as were
good horsewomen to ride thither in the lengthen
ing afternoons. Mrs. Frazier had consulted Col-
labone as to the earliest date on which Barclay
could stand a long drive, as she wished to give a
little fete in his honor, and had planned a picnic
to Barrier Eock, a romantic spot just within the
gorge. Collabone had referred her to his assist
ant, and that younger officer consulted his patient
before committing himself to reply.
" I don't care to ride in an ambulance, doctor,
but I do long to get in saddle. There's no strain
on that leg below the knee. Can't you let me
mount from my back porch here and amble
around these fine mornings before people are up?"
And "Funnybone" assented. He and Barclay
rode out together, very cautiously, next morning
at reveille, and, finding his patient benefited by
the gentle exercise on such a perfect mount as
either of those Kentucky bays, the doctor said,
" Go again ; only ride slowly, and mount and dis
mount only at the back porch, where you have
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 211
only to lower yourself into saddle. Be sure to
avoid any shock or jar, then you're all right."
Hannibal and Mrs. Winn's domestic were the
only persons besides Barclay's orderly to see the
start, but had the domestic herself been alone it
would have been sufficient to insure transmission
of the news. First she told her mistress. Later
she learned from Hannibal that the captain was
going out to stables next morning the same way,
and had ordered coffee to be ready at reveille.
This, too, was conveyed to Laura, and that even
ing she sent for the veteran stable sergeant of the
troop to which her husband was temporarily at
tached, and asked him if Robin Hood, a pretty
little chestnut she used to ride, was still in the
stable. He was, and would Mrs. Winn be pleased
to ride? The sergeant would be glad to see the
lady in saddle again. Her handsome side-saddle
was, with her bridle, always kept in perfect order,
but for several months Mrs. Winn had taken no
exercise that way.
"I'm going to ride at reveille, sergeant," she
confided to the faithful soldier. "It's so long
since I mounted, I wish to try once or twice when
people can't see me." And Sergeant Burns had
promised that as soon as the sentry would release
him after gun-fire Robin Hood should be on hand.
He'd be proud to come with him himself.
212 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
True to his word, Burns was up at four-fifteen;
Robin was groomed and fed and watered and
saddled in style, and ready to start the moment
the sentry was relieved by the morning gun-fire
from the imposition of the order to "allow no
horse to be taken out between taps and reveille,
except in the presence of a commissioned officer
or the sergeant of the guard." The sight that
met the sergeant's eyes as he cantered around
back of the row of officers' quarters, leading
Robin by the rein, was one he never forgot.
With pallid face, down which the blood was
streaming from a cut at the temple, Captain Bar
clay was seated on the steps, striving to bind a
handkerchief about his lower leg. Old Hannibal,
forgetful of the dignity of the Old Dominion,
was actually running down the back road, in
haste, it seems, to summon the doctor. On the
porch, amid some overturned chairs, two athletic,
sinewy young men were grappling, one of them,
Lieutenant Brayton, almost lifting and carrying
the other, Lieutenant "Winn, towards his own
doorway, both ashen gray as to their faces, both
fearfully excited, both struggling hard, both with
panting breath striving to speak with exaggerated
calm.
On this scene, wringing her hands, sobbing
with fright and misery, flitting first to Barclay's
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 213
side, then back towards her straining husband,
saying wild and incoherent things to both, was
Laura Winn. Burns had the frontiersman's con
tempt for a chimney-pot hat, and never seemed
one so incongruous as this, — her riding head-gear
which in the midst of her wailings Mrs. Winn
clasped to her heaving breast. To make matters
more complicated, the neighborhood was waking
up, domestics and "strikers" were gazing from
back porches farther down the row, and Blythe's
big hounds had taken to barking furiously, until
that bulky and bewildered soldier himself came
forth, damned them into their kennel, then has
tened in consternation to the aid of Barclay. By
this time, too, Winn had succeeded in making his
wife hear him, and was ordering her within-doors ;
but like some daft creature she hovered, moaning
and wringing her hands and staring at Barclay,
whose eyes were now beginning to close, and
whose form was slowly swaying.
"In God's name, man, what's happened?" de
manded Blythe, as he seized and steadied the
toppling form. "Why, you're bleeding like an
ox. Your boot is running over. Drop those
horses, Burns, and run for the doctor, lively," he
urged. Needing no further authority, the ser
geant turned his charges loose and scurried after
Hannibal.
214 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
"Help me carry Barclay in-doors," was the
next word. With one warning order to Winn to
keep away, young Brayton broke loose from him
and ran to assist. As though half stupefied, Winn
heavily moved a pace or two, then sank upon a
bench and stared. His wife stood gazing in hor
ror at the trail of blood that followed the three
men into the hall, then faltered over to where the
young soldier sat, moaning, "Oh, Harry! Oh,
Harry!" Reaching his side, she laid her hand
upon his shoulder and bade him look at her, —
speak to her. He rose slowly to his feet, his face
averted, shook himself free, and, with a shudder,
but never uttering a word in reply, passed into
his dark doorway. The nurse-girl, wide-eyed,
met him at the threshold. " Go to your mistress,"
he said, hoarsely. He stumbled on fhrough the
house, unslung the revolver belted to his waist,
and laid it on the hall fable; reconsidered;
buckled it firmly on, and, pulling his hat down
over his eyes, drew back the door-bolt and let him
self out upon the front piazza. Crossing the
parade, he saw the red sash of the officer of the
day. De Lancy was dragging sleepily back from
his reveille visit to the guard, but the sight of
Winn aroused him, and he quickened his pace
and came striding to him.
"Hullo, lad," he hailed, full twenty paces
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 215
away, "what luck? Got Marsden, the sergeant
tells me.— Why Good God! what's hap
pened?"
"Nothing," said Winn, "except, perhaps, I've
killed Barclay. Take me to the colonel."
"You're daft, man!" said De Lancy, instantly,
while an awful fear almost checked the beating
of his heart. Then, seizing Winn by the arm,
"What d'ye mean?" he asked.
"Go and see," said Winn, stupidly, as he
buried his face in his arms a moment, then
stretched them out full length, and, tossing his
head back, shut his eyes as though to blot out a
hateful sight. "Go," he continued; "then come
and take me to the colonel."
And De Lancy started on the run and collided
with Brayton at the door.
"For God's sake, go and hurry up ' Funny-
bone,' " moaned the youngster. " Here's Barclay
bleeding to death."
De Lancy ran his best: guardsmen across the
parade stopped and stared, men in shirt-sleeves
rushed out on the barrack stoops and stood and
gazed, and a corporal, with rifle trailed, came
running over to see what was amiss, just as the
junior doctor, in cap and overcoat, trousers and
slippers, came bolting out of his hallway and fly
ing up the path. In front of De Lancy's one
216 ^ TROOPER GALAHAD.
slipper went hurtling back through midair, but
the doctor rushed on in stocking-foot. The cor
poral picked up the shoe and followed. ]STo one
seemed to look for the moment at Winn, who
turned slowly back to the pathway and like a
blind man seemed groping his way towards Fra-
zier's. The officer of the day passed him by on
«/ Jr i/
the run, following at the doctor's heels, with
never another look at him. Men seemed to think
only of Barclay. Was it credible that an officer
and a gentleman, as Winn had been regarded,
could purposely have dealt that honored soldier a
mortal blow, unless — unless — but who could find
words to frame the thought? Once within Bray-
ton's hallway, De Lancy turned and slammed shut
the door, for others were coming on the run from
far across the parade. Over at the guard-house
the men had started for their breakfast, but hung
there, clustered about the sentry-post, gazing over
the criss-cross plat of the parade, and muttering
their conjectures as to the cause of the trouble.
The sight of Lieutenant "Winn wandering on
down the row, turning from time to time, halting
as though uncertain what he ought to do, while
every other officer was running to the other end
of the row, was something they could not under
stand.
Then Mrs. Winn, in riding-habit, came sud-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 217
denly forth upon her piazza, and, gazing wildly
up and down, caught sight of her husband, now
some fifty paces away along the gravel walk.
Stretching forth her arms to him, she began to
call aloud, " Harry! Harry! please come back!"
He never turned. She ran down the steps and out
to the gate and called him, louder, louder, so that
they could hear the voice all over the garrison in
the sweet, still morning air; but on he went, dog
gedly now, faster and faster. She gathered up
her clinging skirts in one hand, and, pleading still,
followed after. Not until he had mounted the
steps at the colonel's did the young officer turn
again; then with uplifted hand and arm he stood
warning her back. Something in the attitude,
something in the stern, quivering white face,
seemed at last to bring to her the realization of
the force of his unspoken denunciation.
"Harry! Harry!" she cried. "Oh, come and
let me tell you. You don't understand ! I meant
no wrong! I was only going for a ride, — not with
him, — not with him, Harry!" And so, pleading,
weeping, she followed almost to the colonel's gate
before the door was opened from within and
Winn was swallowed up in the darkness of the
hall.
By this time some inkling of the trouble had
been borne to Collabone, ever an early riser. As
218 4 TROOPER GALAHAD.
he came hastily forth from his quarters, the first
thing he saw was the drooping form of Mrs.
Winn, weeping at the colonel's gate. Seizing her
arm with scant ceremony, he whirled her about
and bore her homeward, she sobbing out her story
as they sped along, he listening with clouded,
anxious face.
" Go back to your room, Mrs. Whin," he said,
so solemnly and warningly she could not but heed.
"Go to your baby. I'll go first next door, then
I'll find your husband." She shrank within the
hallway, and threw herself, weeping miserably,
upon the sofa in the pretty parlor, — the parlor
where she had so fascinated Hodge. There the
sound of her baby's wailing reached her in an
interval of her own, and she called to the nurse
to do something to comfort that child. There was
no answer. " Miss Purdy," with clattering tongue
and eager eyes and ears and half a dozen sym
pathizing neighbors, was out in rear of the house,
deaf to demands of either mother or child; there
Collabone found her, and sent her scurrying
within before the fury of his wrath.
"Now, this will not do, Mrs. Winn," he said,
as, following, he lifted the moaning woman from
the sofa. " You must go to your room, — to your
child, as I told you. Captain Barclay will soon be
all right. He has lost much blood, but the hemor-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 219
rhage is checked. E"ow I will go for Mr. Winn.
It's a bad business, but don't make it worse by
any more — nonsense." With that he not too
gently pushed her up the first few stairs, then
turned abruptly and hastened away to Frazier's.
In the hall he found that gray-haired, gray-
faced veteran listening stupidly to Winn.
"I don't understand, sir," he was saying.
"You struck him— with what?"
"I don't know," said Winn. "They say I've
killed him. I have come to surrender myself."
His eyes were as dull and leaden as his heart.
"It's not so bad," burst in the doctor. "Bar
clay fell or was knocked over a chair, and the jar
reopened his wound. He fainted from loss of
blood, but it's checked now."
"But — how? — why?" the colonel was stam
mering. Over the balustrade aloft popped one
head night-capped, and two with touseled hair,
and blanched faces were framed in all three, and
gasping words were heard, and whisperings as of
awe-stricken, news-craving souls. "Where did
this occur, and when did you return, sir?"
"On the back porch of my — of our quarters,
colonel, — when I got back, just before gun-fire."
" And what possible excuse or explanation have
you, sir? What could warrant such — such con
duct?" demanded Frazier, as though at a loss for
220 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
suitable words. Yet, even as he asked, his wife's
predictions reasserted themselves, and he glanced
uneasily aloft.
" Come into the parlor, colonel," implored Col-
labone. "Say no more here. Let me explain.
It's all a wretched mistake." And, hall pushing,
half pulling, but all impelling, the doctor suc
ceeded in hustling the post commander and the
inert, unresisting subaltern within the parlor.
Then, to the infinite disgust of the colonel's wife,
he shut — yes, slammed — the door.
A quarter of an hour later, in close arrest,
Lieutenant Winn returned to his own roof and
locked himself in his den. Mrs. Winn, kneeling
at the keyhole, pleaded ten minutes for admis
sion, all in vain; then she sent her maid for Dr.
Collabone and Mrs. Faulkner, and went straight
way to bed.
CHAPTEE XVI.
THREE days more, and back came Mullane with
the wretched prisoner Marsden. The Irish cap
tain's eyes grew saucer-big when he heard the
harrowing details of recent events at the post.
Never in its liveliest days, before or since, had
Worth known an excitement to match this; for,
with the best intentions in the world, there wasn't
a woman in officers' row who couldrget at the
bottom facts of the episode. Rumors of the
wildest kind that were early in circulation were
best left to the imagination of the reader. The
only thing actually known was that Mrs. Winn
and Captain Barclay were going out riding at
reveille, that Winn surprised them and knocked
the captain down, that Winn was now in close
arrest, Barclay on the mend and again sitting up,
Mrs. Winn confined by illness to her bed, Mrs.
Faulkner (a most important person she) in de
voted attendance, all their differences forgiven if
not forgotten, — and there were few Mrs. Faulk
ner would not have forgiven for the bliss of being
for the time the most sought-after woman at
Worth, for every one wanted to know how Mrs.
221
222 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
Winn was every hour of the day, and hoped to
hear what dreadful imprudence of hers it was
that caused the equally dreadful fracas.
Gravely and quietly the doctors told their story
to the colonel; that there was no arrangement or
engagement to ride together; that Captain Bar
clay had no idea Mrs. Winn ever rose — much less
rode — that early; and most men accepted the
statement as true. But there was the fatal ex
hibition of Barclay's letter by Mrs. Winn to con
front the women, who would have held him guilt
less and saddled all the blame upon her lovely,
sloping shoulders. What had he to write to her
about, unless it was to ask her to ride or something
of the kind? And the idea of their daring to
select such an hour, instead of going out when —
when people could see! And then there was the
fact that Mr. Winn still refused to be reconciled
to his wife. What did that mean, if not that he
deemed her guilty? Blythe, who had a kindlier
feeling for Winn than had most men at Worth
(for Brayton now was utterly set against him and
refused to go near him), sent in his card and
begged to be allowed to see him; and Blythe's
face was sad and gray when, half an hour later,
he came forth again.
"Colonel," said he to Frazier, "something has
got to be done for that poor fellow, or he'll go
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 223
mad. Collabone has told him Barclay was totally
ignorant of Mrs. Winn's plan to ride that morn
ing, — that his assault was utterly unjustifiable;
and between that and the contemplation of his
wife's brainless freak, and all his old trouble, I'm
sorely afraid he'll break down, — go all to pieces.
Can't something be done?"
Both Frazier and Brooks thought something
ought to be done; and so said Blythe and De
Lancy, and Follansbee and Fellows, when they
came trooping home, empty-handed, from their
scout. Only Mullane's detachment had accom
plished anything, and such success as he had was
due almost entirely to Winn's persistent effort and
energetic trailing. Something was being done to
hunt up stolen stores as revealed by Marsden, but
poor Winn, who had ridden home so full of hope
and pluck and energy, now paced his narrow
room for hours, or lay upon his lounge, face
buried in his arms, either dull and apathetic or
smarting with agony. On Mrs. "Winn old Colla
bone had little sympathy to waste. Bluntly he
told her that she was responsible for the whole
business and deserved to be down sick. So, too,
he told the colonel, who was having a blissful
time answering the questions and squirming un
der the nagging of his household at home. At
first Laura had shown tremendous spirit. Mr.
224 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
Winn's conduct was an insult. The doctor's com
ments were an insult. The instant she was well
enough to move she would take her precious child
and return to her mother's roof.
"Your mother hasn't any roof/' said Colla-
bone. "She's boarding in Washington, playing
for another husband, and you'd spoil the whole
game, turning up with a grandchild. What
you've got to do is beg your husband's pardon for
all the scrapes you've led him into, — this last one
especially." Laura wailed and wept and cried out
against the heartless cruelty of her husband, who
left her sick and dying, for all he knew (Colla-
bone had assured him there was nothing on earth
the matter but nerves), and she thought Mrs.
Faulkner ought to make him hear how ill she was.
At last she managed to have herself appropriately
arrayed, and with face of meekest suffering way
laid him on the lower floor before he could close
the door against her, after a brief official visit
from the adjutant.
But the first glance into his haggard, hopeless
face, the sight of despair such as she had never
dreamed of, struck to her soul something like ter
ror. One moment she gazed, all thought of her
puny troubles vanished and forgotten, and then
with one great cry — the first genuine feeling she
had shown — the unhappy woman threw herself at
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 225
his feet and clasped her arms about his trembling
knees.
That night when the doctor called he found her
humbled, contrite, concerned in earnest, and all
for her husband. "It's the first time/7 said he,
" I've ever felt any respect for you whatever, Mrs.
Winn. I believe there's something in you, after
all," — "though probably not much," he later
added when he told his wife. That night, too, he
and Brooks and Blythe sat half an hour with
Winn. The colonel asked them to do it, for it
was time to help him if help was to come at all.
The same day brought inquiry from Department
Head-Quarters as to whether Lieutenant Winn
had made good the amount of that great short
age; and the promised money package had not
come.
Gently they asked him if he had reasonable
right to look for it, and all the answer Ee could
make was that it had been promised on certain
conditions. He had recently accepted them, had
expected to find the money on his arrival at
Worth, but instead had found and the hands
thrown hopelessly forward, palms upraised, were
as expressive as any words could have been.
There was silence a moment. Then he spoke
again.
"And, after all, what matters it now? With
15
226 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
this court-martial hanging over me, I've nothing
but dismissal from the army to look forward to in
any event."
"And what if there should be no trial, Winn?"
said the major, after a reflective pause. "It is
true that you have made an awful — break; but
as yet you are your only accuser, and Mrs. Winn
is the only witness, for Barclay is dumb."
But Winn shook his head. "I know enough
of army matters to know that this thing is all over
the post and will soon be all over Texas. If Cap
tain Barclay was of — the old army, — if he had
been brought up as I was, we might settle it out
of court. My father used to say that there could
be no other reparation for a blow. What would
my apologies be worth? They would not re
establish him."
"Sometimes I think," said Brooks, after
another reflective pause, " that men of Barclay's
stamp need no appeal to the code to set them
right. That is only a device by which physical
courage is made a substitute for other virtues that
may be lacking. Barclay occupies a plane above
it. In view of his record in the Platte country
and in this recent chase after the outlaws, it would
take a bold man to sneer at him, in this garrison
at least; and if he prefer no charge against you,
who is to do it? This trouble can be straightened
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 227
out, Winn," said the major, soothingly, "if only
you could fix — that other."
But how, said they to each other, as they went
gloomily away, was that other to be "fixed"?
How was a poor fellow with nothing but his pay,
burdened by an extravagant and helpless wife, a
little child, and a number of debts, to hope to
raise three thousand dollars to prevent the almost
total stoppage of his stipend? That evening when
Mrs. Faulkner left her invalid friend the latter
asked her to say to Harry that she begged him to
come and speak with her. Harry went, but there
was no spring, no gladness, in the slow and halt
ing feet that climbed the narrow stair; there was
no hope in the care-worn face that came forth
again in half an hour. Laura wished him to take
her watch, her diamond ear-rings, a locket he had
given her in bygone days, and other pretty
trinkets, sell them, and pay their debts: she was
amazed to hear, not that they owed so much, but
that her treasures would bring so little.
The fourth day of his arrest was well-nigh gone.
Collabone had reported Barclay quite himself
again, and sitting up, though none too strong, and
then he saw that Winn at last had been writing.
" Kead that," said Harry, briefly, and handed him
the sheet. It was addressed to Captain Barclay.
" In the last four days I have done nothing but
228 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
think of the great wrong I did you. I have tried
to find words in which to tell you my distress and
self-reproach, but they fail me. There was no
shadow of justification for my suspicion, and
therefore no excuse for my blow. Had you de
sired reparation you would have demanded it, and
the rule used to be for a man in my plight to wait
until it was asked before he tendered an apology
that might be considered a stopper to a challenge.
But I will not wait. At the risk of anything any
man may say or think, I write this to tell you that
I deplore my conduct and with all my heart to
beg your pardon."
Collabone went through it twice with blinking
eyes. "That's the bravest thing you ever did,
Winn," said he, as he laid it carefully down.
" That ought to stop court-martial proceedings."
"That," answered Winn, "is a different mat
ter. I don't ask any mercy. I would have been
better off this minute if he or Brayton had shot
me on the spot."
There was silence a moment as he turned away
and presently seated himself at the little table, his
head dropping forward on his arms. Then Col
labone stepped up and placed a hand upon his
shoulder.
" Winn, my boy, I should lie if I said you ought
not to feel this, but there's such a thing as brood-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 229
ing too much. You'll harm yourself if you go
on like this. You Here! let me take that
in to Barclay. Let him speak for me; I'm
damned if it isn't too much for me!"
But Winn's head was never lifted as the doctor
went his way.
Later that night the post adjutant dropped in.
He and Winn had never been on cordial terms,
but the staff officer was shocked and troubled at
the increasing ravages in the once proud and
handsome face of the cavalryman. "Winn," he
said, in courteous tone, " the colonel directs exten
sion of your limits to include the parade, and —
and to visit Captain Barclay, who wants to see
you this evening, if you feel able. It's only next
door, you know," he added, vaguely. Then,
"Isn't there anything I can do?"
That night just after taps old Hannibal ad
mitted the tall young officer, and ushered him
into a brightly lighted room, where, rather pale
and wan, but with a kindly smile on his face,
Galahad Barclay lay back in his reclining chair,
and held out a thin, white hand.
"Welcome, "Winn," was all he said, and then
the old negro slid out and closed the door.
"There are Oirish and Oirish," as, quoting
Mulvaney, has been said before. Once assured
230 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
that no further proceedings were to be taken
against him for his iniquitous lapse the day of the
rush to Crockett Springs, Captain Mullane con
cluded that he must stand high in favor at court
and that further self-denial and abstinence were
uncalled for, especially in view of the successes
achieved for him by the small detachment of his
party led by Lieutenant Winn. Mullane was a
gallant soldier in the field, from sheer love of
fighting, and the same trait when warmed by
whiskey made him a nuisance in garrison. Not a
week was he home from his successful scout when
he broke out in a new place, and this time he
found instant accommodation.
Little of the stolen property was recovered by
the searching squad sent out as the result of
Marsden's revelations. That voluble scoundrel
was in the guard-house, awaiting trial by general
court-martial. Cavalry drills were resumed again,
and after each morning's work the officers
gathered in considerable force at the club-room.
There had been, fcoth in the infantry and in the
cavalry, vast speculation as to the outcome of
Winn's arrest and Barclay's mishap. But men,
as a rule, spoke of the matter with bated breath.
Mullane, Bralligan, and the one or two Irish ex-
sergeants in the command, known locally as the
Faugh-a-Ballaghs, however, waxed hilariously in-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 231
solent in their comments. Nothing short of dis
missal should be Winn's sentence, and nothing
short of a challenge be Barclay's course. It was
with something akin to amaze that Mullane re
ceived on the sixth day after Winn's arrest official
notification of his release and restoration to duty.
It was with something akin to incredulous wrath
that an hour later he caught sight of the liberated
lieutenant issuing from Barclay's quarters, not
his own, and with Barclay leaning trustfully on
his arm.
Apology accepted ! Explanations tendered ! All
settled, and without a meeting on the field of
honor! "Whurroo! but hwat's the cavalry
comin' to?" howled Mullane over the consequent
cups at the sutler's store and club-room, Fuller
aiding and abetting with more liquor. Up the
hill to the post lurched the big captain that very
afternoon, and into the card-room where some of
his cronies were gathered, Bralligan among them,
and the untrustworthy Hodge. Any one with
half an eye could see there was mischief in the
wind, for nothing caused these old-time Hibernian
rankers keener suffering than to have their betters
settle a question without either court-martial or
a fight. Talk and jeering laugh grew louder as
potations followed on the heel-taps of their pre
decessors. The mail from San Antonio got in at
232 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
five P.M. that evening, and the orderly was dis
tributing letters as the officers returned from
stables. Winn, by invitation, had accompanied
the major, and was walking home with him, Mul-
lane and a crony or two following at safe distance.
Several men saw the light of relief in Winn's face
as he received, opened, and glanced into the mis
sive handed him.
" Has it come ?" asked Brooks, in genuine sym
pathy.
"Yes," answered Winn, almost solemnly. "A
check which I am instructed to have cashed by
Fuller, as he has all the currency in the county
just now."
"I congratulate you with all my heart," said
the major. "I suppose you will see Trott to
morrow."
"I shall see him to-night, if you will excuse
me, sir. I'll go at once to the store. — Brayton,
will you come with me?"
Fuller was out. It was some minutes before
he could be found at the corral. Meantime the
two classmates, reconciled since the long talk be
tween Barclay and Winn, conversed in low, grave
tones in Fuller's private card-room, where none
but officers and his cronies were admitted. " The
trader looked queer," said Brayton, "when he
took the check," but after some fumbling at his
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 233
safe came back with a thick package of treasury
notes, carefully counted out and labelled. On this
display of wealth gloated the fishy eyes of Mul-
lane as a moment later he came reeling in, Bralli-
gan and Hodge at his heels.
To his hilarious salutation Brayton gave short
answer, Winn none at all. Winn's face had
clouded again, and all the sad lines of thought
and care seemed cutting deep, despite the coming
of this much-needed relief.
"Hwat's ahl the lucre, I say?" shouted the
Irish captain, raging at Winn's tacit snub.
"Thousands of dollars, bedad!" Then with leer
ing wink he turned to his half-muddled satellites.
"D'ye mind, lads? — ahl that for a plasther to
wounded honor, — regular John Bull business
over again. That's the English way of settlin' a
crim. con. case. How much did Barclay think it
wurrth, Winn?"
And the next instant he lay floundering on the
floor, felled by a furious blow from the subaltern's
fist.
CHAPTER XVII.
ANOTHER week opened. In honor of Captain
Barclay's restoration to health, the Fraziers had
issued invitations for a picnic to the White Gate.
Many of the officers and ladies had accepted.
Most of them had been bidden. Captain Mullane
had been on sick report four days, — contusions
resulting from tumbling from a broken-legged
chair, was the explanation; but every Pat in the
command had his tongue in his cheek when he
spoke of it, and of matters growing out of the
"contusions" mentioned. Frazier had heard
rumors of the former fracas, and had notified
Messrs. Mullane, Bralligan, et al that he would
have no duelling in his bailiwick; and deep was
the mystery surrounding certain consultations
held by night in Mullane's quarters.
" The blood of that young braggart be on his
own head," said Mullane to his henchmen. " And
you, Hodge, can console the disconsolate widow."
He had no more doubt of the issue of the con
templated combat, no more compunction in the
matter, than had Thackeray's valiant and in
imitable little Gascon, ne Cabasse, in his duel
234
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 235
with Lord Kew. He had long been the leader of
the Hibernian set, and, despite every effort on the
part of the witnesses to the affray at the sutler's
to keep the matter a secret, rumors got out, and
the Faugh-a-Ballaghs knew their chief had been
braved by that hated coxcomb Winn. Every one
of them knew further that Mullane must have
sent his demand for satisfaction, despite the fact
that his "pistol oi," the right, had been damaged
by the collision and was not yet in condition for
effective service. Everybody who was in the
secret knew that Mr. Winn had instantly ac
cepted, naming Brayton as his second, pistols as
the weapons, and suggesting his father's old duel
ling set, that had seen long years and some ser
vice in the old army, as proper to the occasion;
the time and place, however, would necessarily
depend on the victim of the knock-down blow.
All Winn asked and urged was utter secrecy
meantime.
To Mullane there was nothing in the episode
over which to brood or worry. As dragoon ser
geant in the old days, he had "winged his man"
according to the methods described in "Charles
O'Malley" and practised occasionally by his su
periors in rank. He had known many a bar-room
broil, and was at home with pistol, fists, or sabre,
— no mean antagonist when not unsteadied by
236 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
liquor. He had now a chance of meeting on the
field one of the set he secretly hated, "the snob-
ocracy of the arrumy," and he meant to shoot the
life out of Harry Winn if straight shooting would
do it. That Winn had taken advantage of him
and knocked him down when he was drunk was
excuse sufficient for the crime he planned; that
he had brought the blow upon himself by an in
sult ten times more brutal was a matter that con
cerned him not at all. He had no wife or child
to worry about: Mrs. Mullane and the various
progeny were old enough to look out for them
selves, as indeed most of them had long been ac
customed to do. Mullane thirsted for the coming
meeting, and for the prominence its outcome
would give him among all good soldiers all over
Texas.
And as for "Winn, — he who had come riding
home from his successful scout barely a fortnight
before, buoyant, hopeful, almost happy, — the
change that had come over him was something all
men saw and none could fully account for. Cash
ing the draft from the bank at San Antonio, he
had now enough to take Trott's receipt in full
for the value of the stolen stores, even to some
recovered plunder, slightly damaged by rough
handling and by rain. He would then still have
some four hundred dollars, and he aske'd his wife
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 237
for certain bills that had been frequently coming
to her accompanied by urgent demands. Laura
said she had not kept them. Which ought to be
paid first? he asked. Which had been longest
outstanding? Laura's reply was that she did not
know, but if he had got that money from San
Antonio at last she ought to have some to send
to Madame Chalmette. She positively had not a
dinner-dress fit to be seen. Winn did not even
glance at the open doors of a big closet, hung
thick with costly gowns his wife had hardly worn
at all, but that now, she said, were out of style.
There were other matters to be thought of than
dinner-gowns, he told her, gravely, and her face
clouded at once. She had almost forgotten the
troubles of the week gone by.
He went down to his den and sat there think
ing. What ought he to do? what should he do
with this money? Every cent of it would be
swallowed up if he squared those commissary ac
counts and turned the balance into checks and
sent it off to pay these bills, and then if Mullane's
bullet sped true to its mark, what would there be
to take Laura and the baby North? "Home" he
dared not say. She had no home: Collabone's
diagnosis of that situation was correct. Then,
too, if Mullane's pistol did not fail him, there
would be no way in which that mysterious friend
238 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
and beneficiary of his father's could ever be
repaid. What right had he to use one cent of
this money for any purpose whatever, when
another day might be his last? Winn wished he
still had the San Antonio check instead of these
bulky packages of greenbacks. They were now
locked up in Trott's safe, unbroken, pending ac
tion at Department Head-Quarters on the new
schedule sent thither, based on the recovery of
some of the damaged stores. He thought of it
all as, long before gun-fire that morning, the
black care of his life came and roused him from
his fitful sleep and bade him face his daily, hourly
torment. He had risen, and as he softly moved
about the room, thoughtful for her, she slept on
placidly as a happy child, soundly as slept the
nurse and the little one in the adjoining room.
Donning his stable dress, he carried his boots
into the hall and down the creaking stairs, and sat
there, with solitary candle, at his desk, wearily
jotting down inexorable figures. The dawn came
stealing in the eastward window: from aloft
a querulous little wail was uplifted on the still
ness of the summer morning. There was no
answering hush of loving, motherly voice. Laura
could not stand wakeful nights. He tiptoed
swiftly up again to rouse the nurse in case she
too slept on, but he heard her hand beating
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 239
drowsy time on the coverlet, and the soothing
"Shoo, shoo, shoo," with which she communi
cated her own heaviness to her little charge:
Laura had turned uneasily, he saw as he peeped
in at the open doorway, but again slept soundly,
her lovely face now full turned towards him, half
pillowed on the white and rounded arm he used
to kiss with such rapture in the touch of his lips.
Her white brow was shaded by the curling wealth
of her soft, shining hair. The white eyelids
drooped their long curving lashes over the
rounded cheeks, faintly tinged with the rosy hue
of youth and health. The exquisite lips, warm,
delicately moulded, parted just enough to reveal
the white, even, pearly teeth. The snowy,
rounded throat and neck and shoulders were en
hanced in their beauty by the filmy fabric of her
gown, beneath which her full bosom slowly rose
and fell in healthful respiration. How beautiful
she was, how fair a picture of almost girlish in
nocence and freedom from all worldly dross or
care! Even now, in the light of all the gradual
revelation of her shallow, selfish vanity, the heart
of the man yearned over and softened to her. If
he had only realized, — if he had only known more
of the world and life and duty other than mere
soldier obligation, how different all might have
been! What right had he to ask her to be his
240 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
wife? She should have wedded a man many years
her senior, — one fitted to guide and direct her, —
able to lavish luxury upon her. It wasn't all her
fault that she had been so thoughtless, poor girl!
What else had her mother been before her?
What else could one expect of her? Would she
miss him? he wondered. Not long, — not long,
thank God! Beauty such as hers would soon win
for her and baby home and comfort such as he
could never give. That was all over. Something
almost like a sob rose from his heart as he bent
and softly touched with his lips the floating curl
above her temple, then turned back to resume his
work and reface his troubles. Thank God, Mul-
lane's pistol would soon end them all and save
him from the sin that was in his soul the day he
took his own revolver with him. She was sleep
ing still when the morning gun shook the shutter
of her window and he went forth to meet the
sorrows of another day, as he had met those of the
past, — alone.
The air was strangely still, yet the smoke from
the kitchen chimneys back of the barracks settled
downward about the adobe capping or drifted
aimlessly along the roof-trees. Down in the
stream-bed and over about the low bluffs of the
farther shore, swallows and sand-martins were
shooting and slanting about their nests in clamor-
A TROOPER GALAHAD.
ous, complaining gyration. The flag, run up to
the topmast at the crack of the gun, hung limp
and lifeless, without so much as a nutter. Away
to the northwest, over the pine crests of the range,
a belt of billowy cloud gleamed snow-white at
their summits, but frowned dark and ominous un
derneath. Huge masses of cumulus, balloon-like,
thrust distended cheeks to the morning kiss of the
sun; but these were well down to the west. The
orient and the zenith skies were fleckless. Over
at the stables two four-mule teams were hitching
in, and army-wTagons were being laden with tent-
age, luncheon-baskets, ice, boxes of bottled beer,
band instruments, and the like, all going ahead to
the White Gate, while Frazier's bandsmen were
to follow in another as soon as they had finished
breakfast. Their duty would be to set up the
tents, the dancing-pavilion, and the lunch-tables
on the level green in a lovely dell a mile within
the gates, and have everything in readiness
against the coming of the joyous party from the
post. It was planned to carry the women-folk
and such men as couldn't ride in the available
ambulances and spring wagons, while the cava
liers would canter along on horseback. They
would lunch at one, dance, fish, and flirt through
the afternoon hours, have a supplementary bite
and beer towards five o'clock, and drive home-
16
242 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
ward before dark. "Captain Barclay, as the
guest of honor/' said Mrs. Frazier, would go with
her and 'Manda in her own vehicle, a venerable
surrey. The colonel would drive, and Miss Fra-
zier, now withdrawn by a maternal order from
the supposed competition, in order that 'Manda's
charms might concentrate, was bidden to ride.
Winn had no thought of going. Mrs. Frazier
had no thought that it would be possible for him
or Laura to go, — the latter being reported ill in
bed, — an(i therefore had found it easier to com
ply with the colonel's dictum that they must be
invited, and she did it by dropping in and bidding
"Miss Purdy" say to her mistress that she had
called to inquire for her, and was so sorry, so very
sorry, that her illness would prevent her coming
to the picnic, whereupon Laura herself had ap
peared in becoming negligee at the head of the
stairs and smilingly assured the nonplussed lady
that she was so much better she thought it really
might do her good to go. But of this she said no
word to Harry until, returning from stables at
seven o'clock, he was surprised to find her up
and dressing.
On the homeward way he had met Mr. Bral-
ligan, whom he passed without recognition, but
not without mental note of the unusual circum
stance, Bralligan being a late riser, as a general
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 243
thing, and having no business at Barclay's quar
ters anyhow. Brayton awaited him on the piazza
and drew his arm within his own.
"Mullane sends word that he'll be ready at
sunrise to-morrow, Harry, and I have said we
were ready any time."
But the young fellow's voice trembled a bit as
he anxiously scanned his classmate's grave, sol
emn face. It couldn't be that Winn was weak
ening, losing his nerve. It couldn't be that.
But had his trouble so weighed upon him that
he really welcomed the possible coming of the
end ? Brayton's was a hard lot just now. As
siduously he was hiding from his own captain all
indications of the forthcoming meeting. Some
how he felt that Barclay would not hesitate to
disclose the project to the post commander, and
then every cad in Texas would jeer and crow and
say it was Winn and he who crawfished. Bar
clay had noted that Winn seemed avoiding him
again, and spoke of it to Brayton, who answered
that Winn was avoiding everybody : he was blue
and depressed about his affairs.
"Yet I understood that he had received more
than enough to settle those commissary accounts,"
said the captain.
"Oh, yes," answered Brayton, "but there are
other matters." How could he tell Barclay that
244 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
he thought Winn's love and faith in his wife
were dead and gone ? How could he tell him
that Winn would touch no dollar of the money
until he had first met and satisfied another claim ?
Barclay's suspicions would have been aroused at
once.
But Winn was having another trouble now.
Laura had set her heart on going to the picnic,
and for no other reason, she declared, than that
she must show the women there was nothing
amiss. If he and she, either or both, should fail
to attend the Fraziers' entertainment, every one
would say he still believed her guilty of having a
rendezvous with Barclay at that unearthly hour,
and that she was unforgiving.
As he had done many a time before, Winn
yielded. What mattered it? There might be
only that day for him. He could accomplish
nothing by absenting himself. He could aid in
brushing away any cloud upon her name by go
ing and being devoted to her. So go they did, and
women who watched with wary and suspicious
eyes long remembered how fond and lover-like
were Winn's attentions to his beautiful wife;
how often on the way he rode to the side of that
ambulance to say some little word to her ; how
anxiously he seemed to scan that lowering west
ward sky, for by the time they reached the Blanca
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 245
gorge the cloud-banks were climbing to the
zenith and the westward heavens were black as
the cinder-patches along the heights about them,
where fir and spruce and stunted pine had strewn
the slopes with dry, resinous carpet, too easily
ignited by the sparks from hunter's pipe or camp-
fire. At two o'clock, Blythe, Brooks, and Fra-
zier, clambering a rocky ridge to the southeast
of the lovely picnic cove, looked gravely at the
blackening sky, then gravely into one another's
faces. "I think we ought to start at once/' said
the colonel. "That's no place to be caught in a
storm." And he pointed downward as he spoke.
At their feet was the deep, grassy valley,
hemmed by precipitous bluffs. The greensward
at the base of the barrier ridge was soft and vel
vety. A richer soil nourished the roots of the
bunch-grass, and all men knew that more than
once in bygone days the sudden swelling of the
brawling waters that came foaming and swirling
down the ravine from the depths of the crested
heights within had turned that beautiful little
sheltered nook into a deep lake that slowly emp
tied itself through the narrow, twisting, rocky
gorge that ended at the White Gate. On the
level turf the dancers were merrily footing it
even now to the music of an inspiring quadrille,
the pretty- gowns of the women, the uniforms of
246 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
the men, adding brightness to the picture. Below
the camp the mules and horses were placidly
grazing close by the inner opening of the gorge,
the white covers of the wagons and the snowy
canvas of the two or three tents adding to the
picturesqueness of the scene. All at the feet of
the watching group was life, laughter, and care
less joy; all beyond that merry scene a black and
ominous heaven, frowning down on gloomy pine
and rocky hill-side. The ceaseless clamor of the
seething waters, as they turned whirling into the
tortuous gorge, rose steadily above the throb and
thrill of the dance-music, and aloft those relent
less clouds sailed sternly eastward over the sky.
Still the smoke from the camp-fires settled back
and shrank about the earth, as though dreading
the encounter with the sleeping forces of the air.
Then, as the watchful eyes of the elders turned
once more up the mountain side, there came a cry
from Brooks. " By God ! it's coming ! There
isn't a second to lose !"
Frazier, following the direction of that point
ing finger, looked upward, saw the crestward firs
and pines and cedars bending, quivering before a
blast as yet unfelt below, saw sheets of ashen
vapor come sailing over the hill-tops and sweep
ing down the rocky sides, saw the whole moun
tain face turn black as in a single minute, as
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 247
though hiding from the storm that came roaring
down the slope, then lighting up the next instant
in dazzling, purplish glare, as a zigzag bolt of
lightning ripped the storm-cloud in twain, and in
the instant, with crash and roar as of a thousand
cannon rolled into one, let loose the deluge sleep
ing in its depths. As though Niagara were sud
denly turned upon the hill-side, a vast volume of
water swept downward, hissing, foaming, rolling
over the rocks, and the leaping spray dashed high
in air, as the black wealth of waters came surging
down into the ravine.
"A cloud-burst, by all that's holy !" screamed
Brooks, as he sprang down the grassy side of the
bluff. " Up with you, up the hill-side, for your
lives !" The dancers, faltering through the sud
den flutter of the band, for the first time looked
upward, and saw the peril. Then, men and
women, bandsmen and "strikers," the camp
made a wild rush up the eastward hill-side. An
other blinding flash, another thunderous roar that
seemed to shake and loosen the rocks about them,
and in that second of brilliant, dazzling glare the
watchers could see the white wall of the Blanca
come spray-tossing, seething, whirling huge logs
and trees on its outermost wave, tumbling them
end over end, now deep-engulfed, now high in
air, — one immense, furious moving mountain of
248 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
raging water, sweeping towards them from the
depths of the chasm. Then, rolling and frothing
over its puny banks in the valley below, a choco
late flood, foam-crested, spread right and left
through the deserted camp, licking up the cook-
fires, sweeping camp-chairs and tables off their
legs, bodily lifting wagons and ambulances and
sending them waltzing to the wild music of the
storm over the flats where twinkled dainty-slip
pered feet the moment before, then bore them
away towards the inner mouth of the gorge just
in time to mix them up with such frantically
struggling mules as through native obstinacy had
resisted the impulse to scamper to higher ground
while yet there was time. Worst sight of all,
right there in the midst of the logs, chairs, wagon-
beds, that came swirling beneath them; was a
despairing woman's struggling form, revealed by
a woman's white dress.
"Merciful God!" shrieked Mrs. Faulkner;
" it's Laura Winn. She went up towards the falls
not ten minutes ago."
Vain fool ! What could have been her object ?
Barclay, never dancing, had been looking smil
ingly on. Both the Frazier girls had been led,
not too willing, away by partners. Four sets had
been formed, and Mrs. Winn, pleading fatigue,
had asked to be excused, had sauntered past Bar-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 249
clay's seat, and, before his eyes, had turned up
the narrow, winding, sheltered pathway by the
Blanca. Had she dreamed it possible that he
would follow? Follow her he did not. Was
it — a far more charitable thought — in search
of Harry she had gone? Sombre and absent-
minded, he had earlier slipped away among the
trees, avoiding even Brayton. But now Barclay
was seen on the near side of the torrent, limping
up and along the steep slope, in imminent danger
of slipping in, swinging in his hand a long lariat
that he had drawn from the nearest wagon when
the wild up-hill fight began. They remembered
later that he was the last man out of the hollow.
Already Brooks, Brayton, De Lancy, and half a
dozen men were hurrying along the hill-side to
aid, but Brayton reached him first and seized his
arm just as another cry went up from the hill
top, — just as from the opposite side of the seeth
ing torrent the tall figure of Harry Winn came
bounding through the stunted trees, and, hatless,
wild-eyed, he seemed searching the tossing mass
of wreckage on the bosom of the waters. An
other instant still a white hand was waved aloft
in their midst ; then a white arm encircling a
log, a terror-stricken white face, all showed dimly
one moment before again borne underneath, hid
den by the yellow body of a whirling ambulance,
250 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
and in that one instant, far leaping, Winn
plunged into the torrent and struck out savagely
to reach his wife.
Vain, hopeless effort ! Eddying in huge circle
at the rocky shoulder just above the entrance to
the gorge, the wild waters near the eastward shore
bore their burden, jarring and crushing, close
under the heights on which were clustered the
panic-stricken revellers from Fort Worth. But
on the farther side, as it narrowed towards the
entrance, the hissing torrent tore like a mill-horse
on its way. Into this heaving flood leaped Winn,
and, before the eyes of screaming women and
helpless, horror-stricken men, was sucked into the
rush and whirl of foaming waves sweeping resist
less through the rocky canon, away towards the
fair White Gate, away out and beyond the lovely
foot-hills, tossed and battered and crushed by
whirling logs, dragged under by the branches of
uprooted trees, borne away at last, rolling, gasp
ing, still feebly, faintly struggling, until on the
broad lowlands the torrent spent the fury of its
concentrated spite, and, swiftly still, but no
longer raging as when curbed and held by the
barrier gate, the Blanca foamed away to strew the
tokens of the fearful storm right and left for
miles along its banks, and to land all that was
mortal of Harry Winn, bruised, battered, yet
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 251
so placid in death that strong men's voices broke
when telling how they found him, resting with
weary head upon his arm on the sandy flat
that lay just beneath the little summer-house on
the overhanging bluffs, — just where Laura had
looked down over the misty shallows from that
very height the morning her soldier husband had
reached his home at reveille and found her —
wanting.
They bore her wailing home that night, wid
owed and crying, Woe is me ! yet with what wild
thoughts throbbing through her brain! Who
was it that came leaping to her aid as she felt her
self again dragged under in that swirling eddy?
Whose voice was it that rang upon her drowning
ears? Whose strong arms had clasped and sus
tained her and held her head above water, while
other strong hands, hauling at the lariat made
fast about his waist, drew them steadily to shore?
Then angels came and ministered to her, — the
women, — while the men clustered about her
dripping hero, Galahad. Only for a moment,
though, for there was mounting bareback in hot
haste and thundering away at mad gallop, de
spite the drenching rain, for he who had saved
the wife implored those who could ride to haste
and save the husband.
All Fort Worth again went into mourning
252 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
with the setting of that woful sun. It had borne
its fill and more of battle and of sudden
death.
And people resurrected Hodge's stories later
on, though Hodge himself was readily excused.
They recalled how Channing's widow and little
ones were cared for after that officer's untimely
death in the shadows of old Laramie Peak. They
recalled Porter's ailing wife and the sea-side
sojourn, and the old ordnance sergeant's family
burned out at Sanders. It wasn't many days be
fore the lovely, drooping widow of poor Harry
Winn was quite well enough to be sent the long
journey to the North; yet some weeks elapsed
before she would consent, she said, to be torn from
her beloved's grave. When, gently as possible,
she was told in July that the quarters she still
occupied were needed for her husband's successor,
she proposed to spend a few weeks with Mr. and
Mrs. Faulkner, but they were forced to limit that
visit to a few days. There was no reason why she
could not have started in June, for that devoted
mother, Mrs. Waite, had dropped temporarily the
pursuit of Senators and Representatives in Con
gress assembled, and wired that she would meet
her daughter in New Orleans, and the command
ing general at San Antonio notified her that
abundant means for all her homeward journey-
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 253
ing for self and nurse and baby were in his hands.
She thought she ought to stay until all poor
Harry's affairs were straightened out; and Fra-
zier had to say that that, too, was all attended to.
Yet all the while she seemed to think that she
could not sufficiently thank the heroic Captain
Barclay, and begged to see him for that purpose,
also to consult him, day after day, until — was
there collusion? — he suddenly received orders to
proceed to San Antonio on court-martial duty,
and was on his way before she knew it, — before,
said the Fraziers, she could get ready to go with
him. Nor was he there when she passed through,
under Fuller's escort, to the Gulf, nor did she see
him once again in Texas. Letters, fervently
grateful letters, came to him from Washington,
whither she had flitted, and where, it is reported,
she was to have a clerkship. But when people
spoke of her to Barclay he smiled gravely and
had nothing to say. All her late husband's ac
counts were declared settled and closed within a
very few months, and all men knew by that time
whose hand it was that had lifted the burden;
yet Laura Waite had lost the last vestige of her
power where Galbraith Barclay was concerned.
Long before the fall set in, Barclay returned
to his post of duty, eagerly welcomed by officers
and men, except the Faugh-a-Ballaghs. Some-
254 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
body had sent from San Antonio a marble head
stone for Winn's lonely grave in the little ceme
tery. Somebody had secured for his widow that
clerkship in the Treasury Department, which
within another year she left to wed a veteran ad
mirer of her mother, to the unappeasable wrath
of that well-preserved matron and the secret joy
of 'Manda Frazier, who thought that now perhaps
the eyes of Galahad would open to her own many
charms of mind and person. Yet they did not.
Somebody in a childish, sprawling hand was
writing letters every week to the doughboy
trooper, who by that time had the best drilled
company at Worth, owing, said the Faugh-a-
Ballaghs, when forced to admit the fact, to Bray-
ton's abilities and to an Irish sergeant. Barclay's
weekly mail was bigger than that of anybody else
except the commanding officer, whose missives,
however, were mainly official, and the number of
letters penned in feminine or childish hands
seemed, like Galahad's godchildren, ever on the
increase. Mrs. Blythe came back from leave,
bonnier than ever, and blissful beyond compare
in the possession of secrets she could not share
with even her oldest cronies, yet'that leaked out
in ways no man could hope to stop. Ned Law
rence's children were well, happy, thriving, —
little Jim at Barclay's home with other godsons,
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 255
two or three, where a widowed sister cared for
them as for her own, so said Mrs. Blythe when
fairly cornered, while Ada was at a famous old
Connecticut school not far from the Barclay
homestead.
"Good heavens!" said Blythe, one day in late
October, " these women have powers of divination
that would be priceless at police head-quarters.
Why, they've got hold of facts I thought only
Mrs. Blythe and I knew, — facts that Barclay
would have kept concealed from every one, but
that we simply can't deny."
And so, little by little, the details of some, at
least, of Galahad's benefactions became known,
though no man knew how many more were held
in reserve. For three long years he lived his
simple, studious, dutiful life at Worth, a man
the soldiers and their wives and children learned
to love and look up to as their model of all that
was kind and humane (they well-nigh worshipped
him at Christmas times), — a man his brother offi
cers of the better class honored as friend and
comrade, worth their whole trust and esteem, and
from the armor of whose reserve and tolerance
the shafts of the envious and malicious glanced
harmless into empty air.
There were women, old and young, who
thought him lacking in more ways than one. The
256 A TROOPER GALAHAD.
Fraziers said not much, but looked unutterable
things when they went North on leave and peo
ple asked for Galahad. It was a family tradition
that he had treated 'Manda very badly; that is,
mamma said as much, but the elder sister had
views of her own not entirely in harmony with
those of her beloved parent. 'Manda herself
found consolation by marrying in the army not
two years later, and her husband thinks to ^ this
very day that Barclay, with all his wealth, se
cretly envies him his treasure, though admitting,
in those lucid intervals to which so many lords
are subject, that perhaps Barclay wasn't so con
foundedly unlucky after all. It was at their
quarters some years later still, at a far-distant
post, that in the course of an evening's call,
in company \vith his host, Lieutenant-Colonel
Brooks, the chronicler of a portion, at least, of
this episode of old-time army life was favored
with the most important facts of all.
"What do you think !" said the stout possessor
of Mrs. 'Manda's matured and rounded charms,
as he came "Bustling in with the Army and Navy
in his hand, "Galahad Barclay's married at last.
Here it is : To Ada, only daughter of the late
Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel Lawrence, — th U. S.
Cavalry."
"Ada Lawrence! That child!" screamed
A TROOPER GALAHAD. 257
madame, with eyes and drawl expansive. " Well,
of ail-
But others, who have seen her in her happy
wifehood, declare that Ada Lawrence grew up to
be one of the loveliest of the lovely girls that
married in the army, — and they are legion.
THE END.
/<? JfSL.
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